the SCAF as a common aircraft, is dying; as a common framework for networked warfare, the SCAF may survive.
And this fits very well with the Rafale F5. The F5 is no longer waiting for a hypothetical European NGF to enter connected warfare; it is already building the French layer: sovereign network, combat drone, long-range effectors, cooperative sensors, distributed fusion. The residual SCAF could then be used to enable this French layer to communicate with the German, Spanish, British, Italian, or NATO layers.
In fact, this would be a more mature form of European cooperation: fewer grand promises about “the aircraft of tomorrow,” more concrete work on interfaces, standards, cybersecurity, links, compatible sovereignties, and operational interoperability.
It’s less spectacular than a model of the NGF at Le Bourget, but militarily much more useful.