Germany’s defence minister has advised weapons makers to cease complaining and “ship” on re-arming Europe, as he known as for manufacturing to extend to match his nation’s booming spending plans.
Boris Pistorius advised the Monetary Occasions his authorities had addressed long-standing business issues by streamlining lots of of billions of euros of latest navy spending.
“There isn’t any motive to complain any extra,” Pistorius mentioned within the FT interview. “The business is aware of completely nicely that it’s now accountable for delivering.”
The commercial teams needed to maintain up their finish of the discount, he mentioned, as Europe seeks to discourage Russian aggression amid waning US curiosity within the continent’s safety. Berlin is aiming to boost its annual defence spending to €162bn by 2029, a 70 per cent enhance from this 12 months.
“Sadly, we nonetheless expertise delays in particular person tasks, the place all the things appears settled, after which delays happen on the business aspect — which I then should account for,” Pistorius mentioned.
“Trade must ramp up its capacities. That applies to ammunition, to drones, to tanks — actually to virtually each space.”
The 65-year-old Social Democrat is tasked with delivering a “Zeitenwende” — or sea change — in his nation’s strategy to defence. The goal, introduced three years in the past after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, is to remodel the armed forces after a long time of under-investment and provides Germany a number one position in European safety.
Pistorius is because of meet US secretary of defence Pete Hegseth in Washington on Monday, the place he mentioned he would focus on a “highway map” for US safety help for Europe. A broadly anticipated discount shouldn’t depart functionality gaps that may threat “making an invite to Putin”, he warned.
Additionally on the agenda is Ukraine and the urgent challenge of US Patriot air defence programs, after deliveries to Kyiv have been paused by Washington. Berlin has already given three of its as soon as 12-strong inventory of the essential Patriot programs to Kyiv.
“We solely have six left in Germany,” Pistorius mentioned, including that two others had been lent to Poland and no less than one was all the time unavailable resulting from upkeep or coaching. “That’s actually too few, particularly contemplating the Nato functionality objectives we’ve got to fulfill. We undoubtedly can’t give any extra.”
Pistorius mentioned he would focus on a proposal he made to Hegseth final month to let Germany purchase two Patriot programs from the US for Kyiv.
However he mentioned Germany wouldn’t ship its long-range Taurus missiles to Ukraine regardless of a wave of current Russia air assaults and a renewed request from Kyiv.

The minister additionally rejected joint borrowing or eurobonds at EU stage to assist indebted international locations equivalent to France and Italy enhance defence spending. Requested about proposals for such borrowing, he mentioned: “No.”
“Eurobonds imply that those that have already carried out or are doing their homework pay for what others don’t do,” he added.
Pistorius mentioned his ministry was engaged on a procurement plan for tools together with tanks, submarines, drones and fighter jets nicely into the 2030s, to make good on conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s pledge to make the German military Europe’s strongest.
Lengthy-term contracts with “common annual buy obligations” would goal to deal with the long-standing business grievance that it can’t spend money on costly new manufacturing strains with out certainty about future orders.
The measure would stop German troopers from lumbering round with outdated weapons, he mentioned. In 2022, as Europe reeled from Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, the then head of the German military mentioned its troops have been nearly “empty-handed”.
“The weak point previously was all the time that replacements have been solely procured as soon as the present ones have been virtually gone or damaged,” Pistorius mentioned. “We want a system that renews itself by means of steady deliveries over a few years, in order that the variety of operational tanks all the time stays the identical.”

On drones, the place innovation is happening at a dizzying tempo, he pledged that Germany would make sure the armed forces solely acquired “state-of-the-art” merchandise. He added he would enable advance funds to arms producers: “These are all new devices supposed to assist the business acquire momentum.”
A report revealed final month by the think-tank Bruegel and the Kiel Institute for the World Economic system discovered that European ammunition and artillery manufacturing capability had elevated considerably over the previous three years. However it warned that the manufacturing price of the battle tank utilized by many European nations — the Leopard 2A8 made by the Franco-German KNDS, with a gun made by Rheinmetall — continued to lag behind that of US and Russian equivalents.
At the same time as he known as for the business to hurry up, Pistorius mentioned he was looking for to enhance procurement. “We have to get quicker. We have to develop into more practical. We have to throw guidelines overboard on the subject of procurement and planning.”
Often called a straight talker and a staunch supporter of Ukraine, Pistorius has emerged because the nation’s favorite politician since changing into defence minister. He’s the one member of the earlier cupboard, led by Olaf Scholz, to have remained in submit for the reason that change of presidency in Might.
Pistorius mentioned the nation had been faster than he anticipated to just accept the necessity to re-arm. He pointed to surveys exhibiting {that a} majority of the inhabitants supported increased defence spending in addition to the introduction of a voluntary type of navy service, due subsequent 12 months. “This mindset change is in full swing,” he mentioned.
A local of Osnabrück within the north-western state of Decrease Saxony, the place British troopers have been stationed to guard what was Nato’s jap flank through the chilly conflict, Pistorius mentioned he stood out inside his celebration for choosing navy service quite than a civilian various.
He was additionally in favour of the deployment of US Pershing II missiles in west Germany within the Nineteen Eighties, when most of his fellow Social Democrats demonstrated towards it. Extra lately, he has been criticised by the celebration’s outdated guard, who’ve been pushing for a détente with Moscow.

“I’ve all the time been satisfied that if you wish to speak about peace and détente on equal phrases, you’ll be able to solely try this from a place of power, solely from eye stage,” he mentioned. “To not intimidate anybody, however to make it clear that we all know what we will do — we need to dwell in peace with you, however don’t suppose that we’re weak or that we gained’t defend ourselves. That’s nonetheless true at the moment.”
The inauguration this 12 months of a everlasting brigade of German troopers in Lithuania to protect the Baltic state — one among Pistorius’s flagship tasks — was a powerful image of Germany’s dedication to Nato virtually 4 a long time after the collapse of the iron curtain, he mentioned.
“The British, the Individuals and the French have been in Germany to guard our jap flank,” he mentioned. “And at the moment, Lithuania, the Baltic states, Poland are the jap flank and we should make a contribution there.”
He insisted that troops from Germany, which for years had a tradition of navy restraint in response to the horrors of the second world conflict, could be prepared to kill Russian troopers within the occasion of an assault by Moscow on a Nato member state.
“If deterrence doesn’t work and Russia assaults, is it going to occur? Sure,” he mentioned. “However I’d advocate that you just go to Vilnius and discuss to the representatives of the German brigade there. They know precisely what their job is.”




















