It's cultural-
Multi-national projects will always be weak on PR. The exception of F-35 is due to the US dominance of a project which in some ways is more international than Typhoon.
Britain is terrible at PR. 1st rule of advertising: never mention anything negative.
Harrier
HSA or BAe released a pamphlet called military misconceptions of the Harrier
in the 1970s; this amounted to reiterating criticisms of the project that prospective clients may have not already heard and countering the claims. It started an advertising claim from a defensive position- always a bad position.
The same mistaken technique of modesty has been revised by Eurofighter- ‘Typhoon is worse than the F-22 and a little better than the Rafale (except in air-to-ground)’ seems the general gist of their promotional efforts. In India are they pushing Typhoon as an ideal Viper killer (just look at the Singapore results), one which offers better potential upgrades than rivals, the greatest technology transparency and compatibility with the best engine choice for Tejas (it fits in the bloody thing, more than can be said for the 414!) ? Yes, but so gently and with such little political clout that they are far from being able to guarantee a sale?
Eurofighter must stick on AESA/AESMA, must accelerate A2G capabilities and must be aggressive with celebrating Typhoon’s strengths. If not it will end up like the Tornado or Jaguar before it, with limited export success. I’d even go as far as suggesting an immediate TVC integration programme and DASS replacement using F-35 era technology.
Just look at Boeing- a company with excellent PR skills. They call the Silent eagle a ‘stealth’ aircraft, despite this claim being entirely fatuous. US aircraft manufacturers are masters of spin and doublethink, European multi-nationals are masters of apology and bluster.
LM claim super-maneuverability is essential for the F-22, at the same time it claims F-35 does not need great agility as modern air combat is all about BVR and situational awareness. Hold on, you might say, this is self-contradictory hogwash (and before you say the F-35 and F-22 are for different missions- look at the customer-it is an F-16 replacement for most export nations- a true multi-role need) !! And you’d be right.
Eurofighter must learn from its US rivals- it must fight dirty and stop apologising.
The Typhoon is the most practical fighter for any nation that can’t make to do with a Gripen. F-35 will be late, will cost a fortune, and will be a nightmare to maintain (if you want it to be stealthy). Typhoon must start aggressive marketing.
Will this happen?
God only knows, with all the split interest involved in multi-national programmes and the anti-PR cultures inherent in Germanic counties the poor, fantastically capable Typhoon may be doomed.