I can't tell from that interview if Trappier is being serious or not. 40 years ago Dassault and SNECMA waltzed away from the EJ200 and Eurojet. I'm not sure what he is really referring to when he says 'parts'.
Safran is leading the SCAF engine but is partnered with MTU, who have a 33% stake in Eurojet Turbo GmbH.
MTU's responsibilities for the EJ200 are the LP and HP and the Digital Engine Control and Monitoring Unit. I guess the IP is tied up within Eurojet Turbo GmbH though.
Trappier still seems to want to be a one-man band. He is more or less implying they have done all the work and could build a cool demonstrator if only it wasn't for the pesky Airbus and Eurofighter folks forcing him to actually build a warmed-over Rafale with lo-viz shaping.
Some elements: Safran has eaten Turbomeca a decade ago, and gained their expertise in aero turbines. A looooong time ago in the 1950's Turbomeca tried their hand at turbojets (and competing with SNECMA) with the Gabizo - and it blew in their faces. Whatever, this means that Safran has aero turbine knowledge inherited from Turbomeca.
Meanwhile SNECMA military turbofan legacy, painfully learned since 1948, is considered a national strategic asset by the French government. Because building military jet engines is so damn hard, and it took SNECMA three atempts to get to the top. Atar was rugged but lasted way too long; M53 was leaky turbojet not on par with F100 / F101 / F110.
Which bring us to the M88. It was indeed one of three major obstacles that led to the Rafale / Typhoon split, the other two being a) naval fighter empty weight of 8-10 tons and b) nuclear strike.
Bottom line: SNECMA knows they have a strategic asset between their hands (a fully indigenous military turbofan capability, let's call it that way) and they won't budge over this, IMHO (or the french government won't).
With EJ200 legacy being split between three nations (RR Great Britain, Germany, Spain) it is no surprise the SCAF engine proves to be a headache.
It is kinda Turbomeca vs SNECMA vs "RR -and their EJ200 partners" that is Germany and Spain.
A case could be make that the reshuffling of Typhoon / Rafale "team nations" is creating headaches. Back in 1987, it was (almost)
-Rafale = France plus Spain
-Typhoon = GB + Germany + Italy
Now, compares that to a) SCAF / GCAP own nations groups* and b) how the european aerospace industry has changed and merged since 1985, 40 years ago when the Rafale / Typhoon split happened.
*SCAF: France plus Spain plus Germany
*GCAP: GB + italy
This totally reshuffles the Typhoon / Rafale respective "blocks". No surprise the whole thing is a quagmire.