Malta Independent

Macron to hike military funds amid Ukraine war, new threats

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French President, Emmanuel Macron, proposed to boost defense spending on Monday by more than a third through 2030 and to “transform” France’s nuclear-armed military, to better face evolving threats and to take into account the impact of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Macron announced a proposal for 413 billion euros (nearly $450 billion) in military spending for the period of 2024-2030, so as to ensure “our freedom, our security, our prosperity, our place in the world.”

That compares with the spending of about 295 billion euros in a similar military plan for 20192025.

The money would notably go to modernizin­g France’s nuclear arsenal, boosting intelligen­ce spending by 60%, doubling the number of military reservists, reinforcin­g cyberdefen­se and developing more remote-controlled weapons.

“Nuclear deterrence is an element that makes France different from other countries in Europe. We see anew, in analyzing the war in Ukraine, its vital importance”, he said in a speech to military personnel at an air base in Mont-de-Marsan in southwest France. France is the only member of the 27-nation European Union with nuclear weapons, and the bloc is still largely dependent on the U.S. and NATO for defense.

Macron also wants to expand French submarine surveillan­ce capacity to depths of 6,000 meters (nearly 20,000 feet), both for military reasons and to protect critical infrastruc­ture such as undersea cables carrying energy and informatio­n across oceans that have come under threat.

Friday’s speech comes as defense officials from the U.S. and allies are meeting in Ramstein, Germany, in order to discuss further help for Ukraine.

Macron didn’t address Ukraine’s pleas to supply French Leclerc tanks — even after a tongue-in-cheek video released on Thursday by Ukraine’s defense ministry vaunting the tanks as “compact, sporty, easy to park’’ and quoting French philosophe­r Jean-Paul Sartre.

France already has provided Ukraine with 18 Caesar cannons, six TRF1 cannons, two Crotale air defense systems, rocket launcher units, anti-tank and anti-air weapons, armored vehicles, munitions, protective gear, medical equipment and military rations, as according to Macron’s office. Earlier this month, France had agreed to send AMX-10 RC armored surveillan­ce and combat vehicles that in French are called “light tanks.”

France is also aiming to train at least 2,000 Ukrainian soldiers as part of EU-wide training efforts.

“What we are experienci­ng on European soil for the past year in Ukraine teaches us lessons”, Macron said.

“The threats are multiple, and mix together”, he said. “There is no longer a peace dividend, because of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine ... The internatio­nal order has ceded to a state of play between nations like we have not seen in decades.”

Macron noted threats from hybrid warfare, cyberattac­ks and continued threats from terrorism, and called for boosting the production capacity of the arms industry so as to be able to help Ukraine and supply the French military.

Among lessons of the Ukraine war, Macron’s office said that the French military needs to be more reactive and ready for quick deployment­s, as well as have equipment that performs well, logistical support and ammunition.

Macron wants France’s military strategy to strengthen the country’s role as an independen­t global power. He called for reinforcin­g military partnershi­ps with European neighbors, as well as countries like Egypt, India, United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, and in Africa.

The new budget plan would need parliament­ary approval. Macron’s centrist alliance doesn’t have a majority in either house of parliament, but military officers have long lamented shrinking spending on the armed forces, and conservati­ve and far-right parties tend to support investment in defense.

France’s military budget had reached 1.9% of gross domestic product in 2021, with a goal to reach 2% by 2025, as per NATO expectatio­ns.

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