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NATO Pressure Sparking Calls to Beef Up German Bundeswehr

© AFP 2023 / SVEN HOPPE / DPADemonstrators take part in a protest titled "There is no Peace with NATO" in front of the venue of the 51st Munich Security Conference (MSC) in Munich, southern Germany.
Demonstrators take part in a protest titled There is no Peace with NATO in front of the venue of the 51st Munich Security Conference (MSC) in Munich, southern Germany. - Sputnik International
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Germany's new commissioner for the armed forces has called for the government to increase spending on the German army, saying that a reduction in the Bundeswehr's capabilities would "annoy" other European countries, amid increasing pressure to meet NATO spending targets.

Hans-Peter Bartels addressed the Bundestag about his plans to boost the country's military resources shortly after being sworn in as the German parliament's new armed forces boss.

Along with improving the equipment given to German servicemen and women in the armed forces, Bartels said he would make efforts to renovate many of the Bundeswehr's barracks, saying that the current policy of "shortage management" was "no longer an acceptable approach."

However, despite calling for increased spending to assist German soldiers, Bartels also warned lawmakers that if the current approach didn't change, the government would be faced with the option of reducing the capabilities of Germany's army, which would be likely to anger fellow EU allies.

"However, this would not only annoy our partners in Europe. It would be absurd," he said.

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Pressure From NATO Spending Targets

Bartels' comments about keeping up military capabilities and increasing spending comes amid ongoing debate about the state of Europe's security, given the political tension with Russia and the current conflict in Ukraine.

Despite Germany already planning to increase funding of the government's armed forces, military spending is still well below NATO's western alliance targets of two percent of total economic output, further increasing pressure on Berlin to ramp up spending.

Following the breakout of the Ukraine crisis, western nations have accused Russia of aggressively interfering with Ukraine's sovereignty, alleging that Russian army battalions have been sent into parts of eastern Ukrainian to fight alongside separatist groups.

Moscow has denied the allegations however, and has pointed to NATO's recent expansion in Eastern Europe as a provocative factor further sparking tensions across the continent and inhibiting the Minsk peace agreement signed to try and stop the conflict in Ukraine.

NATO recently announced that it was establishing six Eastern European bases in Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Romania, along with a 5,000 strong armed force to combat Europe's "changed security environment."

On top of the Eastern European expansion, NATO targets on defense spending have also been viewed as a means of placing pressure on member countries to boost their military capabilities.

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