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Germany backs major NATO defense spending boost — but not to please Trump

Germany will dramatically increase defense spending — not to appease U.S. President Donald Trump but to counter the threat from Moscow, Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Tuesday.

“We will decide to invest significantly more in our security,” Merz told the Bundestag ahead of the NATO leaders’ summit in The Hague. “Not to do the United States a favor — but because Russia actively threatens the freedom of the entire Euro-Atlantic area.”

A day before the speech, Berlin confirmed it would raise military spending to 3.5 percent of gross domestic product by 2029 — Germany’s most ambitious rearmament effort since the end of the Cold War.

To finance the increase, Merz’s government will suspend a constitutional debt brake and seek EU approval to classify defense spending as exceptional, allowing it to skirt the bloc’s deficit limits.

The new spending will see €153 billion allocated to defense in 2029, up from €86 billion in 2025. Germany also pledged €8.3 billion in military aid to Ukraine next year.

The Hague summit is centering on boosting the alliance’s defense spending target from 2 percent of GDP to 5 percent: 3.5 percent of GDP for core defense and 1.5 percent for infrastructure and cyber. While driven in part by U.S. pressure, particularly from Trump, Merz framed Germany’s support as grounded in realism rather than transatlantic deference.

“[Russian leader Vladimir] Putin only understands the language of power,” Merz said, citing intensified Russian strikes on Ukraine and failed ceasefire diplomacy. He reaffirmed support for new EU sanctions targeting Moscow’s shadow oil fleet and pledged Germany’s commitment to NATO’s eastern flank, referencing the deployment of German forces to Lithuania.

The spending increase was approved by NATO countries over the weekend, although Spain says it will be allowed to spend less. That has other countries like Belgium also asking for more lenient treatment on the spending target.

A consensus communiqué is expected to endorse the 5 percent split with a midterm review before 2030.

Following the summit, Merz will travel to Brussels for a meeting of EU leaders to advocate for streamlined defense procurement and regulatory reform. “Security,” he told lawmakers, “is the condition for freedom, for prosperity and for peace — and we must be strong from within, and outward.”

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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