
Germany planning major bunker expansion
Germany currently has only 580 operational shelters with room for about 480,000 people – less than 1% of the population. In a series of interviews with German media last week, Tiesler said that to address this shortfall, the BBK plans to convert underground garages, metro tunnels, and public basements into shelters capable of accommodating one million people, complete with food, toilets and sleeping areas.
'New bunkers with the highest protection standards cost a lot of money and take time. We need faster solutions,' Tiesler told the Suddeutsche Zeitung, noting that a full national shelter plan is expected to be presented later this summer.
'Nearly every basement can become a safe place in the event of an attack,' he said in a separate interview with Zeit, encouraging citizens to reinforce windows, stock essentials, and prepare to shelter for extended periods.
Tiesler called a scenario involving Russian tanks rolling into Berlin unlikely – but warned that as a major NATO logistical hub, Germany would become a target for 'selective strikes' in the event of an eastern front conflict.
German hospitals are being assessed for their ability to treat mass casualties, with Tiesler warning that the health system could face up to 1,000 additional patients per day in a wartime setting. Other plans include doubling the number of warning sirens nationwide, upgrading emergency apps to include missile strike instructions, and possibly introducing a national civil service requirement.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced last month that he intends to make the Bundeswehr the 'strongest army' on the continent. Defense Minister Boris Pistorius reportedly hopes for a 'drastic increase' to the country's military budget, up to €90 billion ($102 billion) by 2028.
Tiesler has insisted that civil protection must not be neglected, calling for €30 billion over the next decade – including at least €10 billion by 2029, the year German officials have repeatedly cited as the deadline for Berlin to be "ready for war.'
Moscow has repeatedly dismissed claims that it intends to attack NATO or EU countries as 'utter nonsense,' accusing the West of using fear to justify soaring defense budgets. Russian officials have also condemned Western Europe's militarization drive, expressing concern that, rather than supporting US-led peace initiatives for the Ukraine conflict, the EU and UK are instead gearing up for war with Russia.
According to a recent survey, Germany has now replaced the US as the country Russians view as most unfriendly. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov recently stated that Germany's military buildup and arms deliveries to Kiev show Berlin's 'direct involvement' in the conflict. He warned that the country is 'sliding down the same slippery slope it already followed a couple of times in the last century – toward its own collapse.'
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