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Europe still has no plan for its massive defense boom

Summary by Newsweek
"We are taking decisive action," European Commission chief, Ursula von der Leyen, said in March.

9 Articles

Center

The required two percent of GDP that NATO member states are supposed to allocate to military spending seems to be a thing of the past. Calls are getting louder that countries should allocate three percent or more. Will Slovenia be able to play by NATO's dictates, as the coalition Left is calling for? The government is in favor of so-called dual-use equipment. We talked about this with MEPs Matej Tonin and Vladimir Prebilič.

·Ljubljana, Slovenia
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Center

Only 14 of the 27 Member States of the European Union officially requested the European Commission to increase its budgetary flexibility in order to increase its defence costs, which increased its concern that the Rearm Europe ambitious plan will not reach its target of EUR 800 billion, notes Euroactive March, adopted by Agerpres.

·Romania
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European arms factories work with broken engines. Production increased after the European Commission launched an ambitious programme for the ageing of the continent.

·Bucharest, Romania
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  • 75% of the sources are Center
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koreapro.org broke the news in on Tuesday, May 6, 2025.
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