The Daily Telegraph

Merkel defends Nato as ‘bulwark of freedom’

German chancellor agrees to increase defence budget amid riposte to Macron’s ‘brain death’ comments

- By Justin Huggler in Berlin

ANGELA MERKEL launched a spirited defence of Nato yesterday, in what was widely seen as a public rebuking of France’s Emmanuel Macron.

Mrs Merkel told the German parliament that the transatlan­tic alliance was more important to Europe’s security today than it was at the height of the stand-off with the Soviet Union.

“More even than during the Cold War, it is in our own best interests to maintain Nato,” she told MPS. “Europe cannot defend itself.”

Describing Nato as a “bulwark of freedom and peace”, Mrs Merkel said Germany was “particular­ly indebted to our American friends”.

The German chancellor’s comments were clearly aimed at Mr Macron, after the French president claimed earlier this month that the alliance was “brain dead” and that Europe could no longer rely on the US for its defence.

It comes after Mrs Merkel reportedly rowed with Mr Macron over his remarks and told him she was “tired of picking up the pieces” after him.

Her latest comments came in a budget debate in the German parliament. The chancellor traditiona­lly defends her government’s record in the debate, but despite heading an increasing­ly fragile coalition, Mrs Merkel chose to devote the first half of her speech to Nato.

She pledged to increase German defence spending to 1.5 per cent of GDP by 2024 and to reach Nato’s target of 2 per cent by the 2030s.

Germany has come under intense US pressure to meet the target as part of Donald Trump’s drive to make Europe pay more towards the cost of its own defence.

Mr Macron spoke out against the Trump administra­tion’s attitude towards Nato in an interview with The Economist earlier this month.

“We are currently experienci­ng the brain death of Nato,” Mr Macron said, arguing that Europe is “on the edge of a precipice” and needs to start thinking of itself as a geopolitic­al power.

Mrs Merkel was reportedly “furious” at the interview and argued with the French president over it on the sidelines of a dinner to mark the 30th anniversar­y of the Berlin Wall, according to an unconfirme­d account in The New York Times.

“I understand your desire for disruptive politics, but I’m tired of picking up the pieces,” the newspaper claimed Mrs Merkel told Mr Macron. “Over and over, I have to glue together the cups you have broken so that we can then sit down and have a cup of tea together.” It is no secret that Mrs Merkel does not share Mr Macron’s ambitions for a more federalist European Union, but relations between the two leaders have deteriorat­ed in recent months.

When Mr Macron first became French president, much was made of his good relations with Mrs Merkel, and there were hopes the two could restore the Franco-german alliance at the heart of the EU.

But Mr Macron has reportedly grown impatient with Mrs Merkel blocking his initiative­s for EU reform.

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