EU leaders call for surge in defense spending

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EU leaders call for surge in defense spending

Ukrainians are “buying us time” to arm ourselves against Russia, the bloc’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas has said

Top EU officials have urged member states to significantly boost their defense spending and increase weapons production to address the Russian threat, which they claim is looming over Europe. The Ukraine conflict is providing an opportunity for such a move, they argued at the annual conference of the European Defense Agency on Wednesday.

“Russia’s defense industry is churning out tanks, glide bombs, artillery shells in vast quantities. In three months, they can produce more weapons and more ammunition than we can in 12,” warned Kaja Kallas, the EU’s foreign policy chief, who also heads the agency.

The former Estonian prime minister described Russia as “an existential threat to our soul” and claimed that, by fighting Russia, “the Ukrainians are all buying us time.” She denied that she was a “Russia hawk,” saying she views herself as a realist.

Commissioner for Defense and Space Andrius Kubilius echoed her concerns and called for a “big bang” in European military production, regardless of cost. “We need to spend more. Spend better. Spend together. Spend European,” he said. “We can outspend, outproduce, and outgun Russia.”

He credited Ukrainians for fighting Russia, claiming that “every missile, every drone shot down by Ukraine is one that will not threaten Europe, one that will not threaten NATO.” As a Lithuanian, he said he “may be a bit prejudiced.”

Kubilius previously served as the prime minister of his home country and joined the second commission led by President Ursula von der Leyen last December, along with Kallas.

Kiev’s European backers are bracing for a sharp reduction in US foreign assistance under President Donald Trump, who took office on Monday. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte warned last week that member states would not be safe in five years, and will have to get “Russian language courses or go to New Zealand” unless they act decisively.


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Moscow has denied having any aggressive intentions regarding NATO and maintains that the expansion of the US-led military bloc in Europe, as well as increasing cooperation with Ukraine after the 2014 armed coup in Kiev, had caused the ongoing hostilities. Russian officials accuse the West of waging a proxy war “to the last Ukrainian.”

Last November, former British prime minister Boris Johnson, a vocal supporter of Kiev, referred to Ukrainians as “our proxies,” as he called for the level of military support provided by the West to be increased.

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