Tag: NATO summit

45% Germans for 5% of GDP on defence

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius looks out of the turret of a Leopard 2A6 during a presentation | File Photo: Federico Gambarini/dpa

Some 45 percent of German respondents favour spending 5 percent of GDP on defence that compared to 37 percent who oppose it, with 18 percent saying they don’t know, a poll from YouGov conducted for the Munich-based newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung showed.

Most Germans say defence industry investments justifiable

Employees at Rheinmetall work on a cannon for the Leopard 2A4 battle tank in Lower Saxony, Unterluess on June 06, 2023 | File Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa

Over 56 percent of respondents polled by the opinion research institute Innofact said private investments in the arms industry were justifiable, in a significant change from 2022 when 53 percent of respondents still had reservations about investing in defence companies. Since then, the prospect of higher government defence spending in Germany and many other countries has driven many stocks to record highs.

Germany needs 60,000 extra troops to meet NATO targets

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius gives a press statement before the meeting of the International Contact Group (UDCG) to coordinate military support for Ukraine at NATO headquarters | Photo: Helena Dolderer/dpa

The Bundeswehr had a strength of 181,150 soldiers at the end of 2024, falling short of previous recruiting targets. NATO member states are to be assigned new national targets for their military capabilities, including weaponry, that are expected to be increased by around 30%.

Germany’s Baerbock backs U.S. missiles to deter Russia

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock speaks during a press conference | Photo: Britta Pedersen/dpa

The U.S. and German governments announced plans for the deployment of U.S. missile systems that could reach Russia. These include nuclear-capable Tomahawk cruise missiles with a range of 2,500 kilometres, SM-6 anti-aircraft missiles and newly-developed hypersonic missiles.

Germany says Hungary’s EU presidency causing ‘a lot of damage’

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán visited former U.S. President Donald Trump at Mar-A-Lago in Florida in a trip he labelled "Peace mission 5.0" on July 12, 2024 | Photo: Twitter/X feed of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán

Deputy government spokesman Wolfgang Büchner said that Orbán could travel wherever he wanted, adding, “What is not acceptable is that he travels through the world with the impression that he is doing so on behalf of others. And there will certainly be further discussion about how to deal with this.”

Kremlin slams plans for long-range U.S. weapons in Germany

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov complains about support for Ukraine from Germany, France, the UK and the USA | File Photo: Vladimir Smirnov/KREMLIN/dpa

Russia has criticized the planned stationing of long-range US weapons in Germany as a return to the Cold War, after German leaders said the step was necessary due to the increased threat posed by Russia to European security. “We are well on the way to a Cold War. This has all happened before,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday.