logo
Germany and UK to jointly develop long-range missiles – DW – 05/16/2025

Germany and UK to jointly develop long-range missiles – DW – 05/16/2025

DW16-05-2025

Germany and the UK are increasing their military cooperation. They want to develop long-range precision weapons. The aim is to protect Europe from potential attacks.
The German armed forces are to become "the strongest conventional army in Europe." Chancellor Friedrich Merz set this ambitious goal in his first government declaration to the Bundestag this week. "We must be in a position to defend ourselves so that we do not ever actually need to defend ourselves," said the new head of government, referring to the threat posed by Russia. This is to be achieved in close coordination with European partners, and with the UK, in particular.
This was made official last fall in an agreement that both countries celebrated as "historic." It has become known as the Trinity House Agreement, named after the place in London where it was signed by Defense Minister Boris Pistorius and his British counterpart John Healey last October. Never before has there been such an agreement between the two countries.
Healey traveled to Berlin this Thursday (15.05.2025) to concretize the joint plans.
Defense Ministers Boris Pistorius and John Healey met to discuss cooperation Image: Twardy/BMVg
Common strategic goals
Although the UK is no longer a member of the EU, the nuclear power remains a strong military partner in NATO and shares common interests with Germany. "The UK is deeply involved in the geographical areas that are important to Germany, such as the Baltic states and the far north, but also to some extent on NATO's eastern flank," stressed Ben Schreer, head of the Berlin office of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS).
Both countries now intend to join forces to protect the North Atlantic and the North Sea, for example. Not only do important sea trade routes run through the North Sea, but also gas pipelines and cables that carry electricity from large offshore facilities to the coast.
Following suspected Russian attacks on underwater cables in the Baltic Sea, security experts fear similar attacks in the North Sea. Both countries want to work to counter such attacks by providing a "clear and comprehensive picture of the underwater situation," the agreement states.
How Merz aims to regain Germany's standing on foreign issues
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Joint operations with submarines and maritime reconnaissance aircraft are also part of this plan. In the future, the German P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft will be deployed from Scotland to help monitor the airspace over the North Atlantic. The Bundeswehr has placed a new order for these aircraft and the British Army is already using them, meaning that German crews can already train there.
"These long-range maritime reconnaissance aircraft can target submarines over long distances," emphasized Defense Minister Pistorius after the discussions with his British counterpart. As a result, both partners will jointly strengthen NATO's submarine-hunting capabilities in the North Atlantic and North Sea.
Development of long-range missiles
Both countries have a strong defense industry, and there are also plans for cooperation in this area. For example, the German armaments group Rheinmetall manufactures the Boxer armored transport vehicle at its plants in the UK, of which the British army has ordered 500 units. One of the key elements of the agreement is the joint development of precision weapons with a range of more than 2000 kilometers (1242,7 miles), which other European countries can also take part in.
Another area of cooperation is the development of armed drones. This is an area in which the Bundeswehr is lagging behind and only started acquiring smaller combat drones this year. The British Army, on the other hand, has years of operational experience in this field, from which the Bundeswehr could benefit.
The Boeing P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft will be used by the British and German armed forces to monitor the airspace over the North Sea and the North Atlantic Image: Alexander Bogatyrev/SOPA Images/Sipa USA/picture alliance
Developing compatible weapons systems
The two countries also want to cooperate on developing fighter aircraft for the future — up to a point at least. That's because Germany is already developing a new system in collaboration with France and Spain, while the UK is developing a different system together with Italy and Japan. "From a European perspective, it makes perfect sense to at least ensure that the two systems are compatible so that they can work together in future joint missions," emphasized security expert Schreer.
This addresses a point where Europe has repeatedly created obstacles for itself: there are too many different weapons systems, some of which are not compatible with each other. "We need common standards and we need a simplification of systems in Europe," said German Chancellor Friedrich Merz shortly after taking office.
At a time when European NATO states are having to shoulder a greater burden in terms of defense, German-British cooperation could set an example. It is "a constructive building block" that complements other forms of cooperation, says Schreer, like that between Germany and France.
As Schreer sees it, "the big question is what the UK will be willing and able to contribute to the defense of Europe. And this, of course, raises some crucial questions, especially with regard to the UK's defense budget, where larger investments are likely to become increasingly difficult."
German FM backs 5% NATO spending target
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
How much money will the Bundeswehr get?
In Germany, the question of the size of the future defense budget is also being raised. Due to the change of government, there is still no budget for 2025, but there are already heated discussions about the required sums.
This Thursday, Foreign Minister (CDU) backed the target set by US President Donald Trump of spending up to 5% of gross domestic product (GDP) on defense in the future — and immediately faced backlash from his coalition partners, the center-left Social Democrats (SPD).
After his meeting with Healey, Defense Minister Pistorius explained that he was responsible for drawing up the defense budget. He said that NATO's decisions at its upcoming summit in June will serve for him as a benchmark. "We all know that this will be much more expensive than the two percent that is being discussed today." Three percent of economic output or more is "not unrealistic." British Defense Minister Healey added: "It's not just about how much we spend, but how we do it."
This article was originally written in German.
While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel plans to stop Gaza-bound ship with Thunberg on board – DW – 06/08/2025
Israel plans to stop Gaza-bound ship with Thunberg on board – DW – 06/08/2025

DW

time2 hours ago

  • DW

Israel plans to stop Gaza-bound ship with Thunberg on board – DW – 06/08/2025

Skip next section Israel says it will block Gaza-bound boat with Greta Thunberg on board 06/08/2025 June 8, 2025 Israel says it will block Gaza-bound boat with Greta Thunberg on board Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said the military would stop the boat carrying climate advocateGreta Thunberg and several other activists to Gaza. The British-flagged Madleen aims to deliver humanitarian aid to the war-torn territory, which has been blockaded by Israel. "I instructed the IDF to act so that the Madleen ... does not reach Gaza," Katz said in a statement. "To the antisemitic Greta and her Hamas-propaganda-spouting friends, I say clearly: You'd better turn back, because you will not reach Gaza." Operated by the pro-Palestinian Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC), the ship left Sicily on June 6 and is currently just off the Egyptian coast. Thunberg said she joined the mission to "challenge Israel's illegal siege and escalating war crimes" in Gaza and highlight the desperation for humanitarian aid. FFC press officer Hay Sha Wiya said on Sunday the boat was currently some 160 nautical miles (296 kilometers) from Gaza and was "preparing for the possibility of interception." In addition to Thunberg, there are 11 other crew members aboard. Among them Rima Hassan, a French member of the European Parliament. Israeli media have reported that the military plans to intercept the yacht before it reaches Gaza and escort it to the Israeli port of Ashdod, before deporting the crew. "The State of Israel will not allow anyone to break the naval blockade on Gaza, whose primary purpose is to prevent the transfer of weapons to Hamas," Katz said.

Italians vote on citizenship rules, labor laws – DW – 06/08/2025
Italians vote on citizenship rules, labor laws – DW – 06/08/2025

DW

time5 hours ago

  • DW

Italians vote on citizenship rules, labor laws – DW – 06/08/2025

Italian voters face questions on citizenship and labor laws in a referendum that must draw 50% turnout for results to be valid. PM Giorgia Meloni has urged supporters to skip the vote. Polls opened in Italy on Sunday, in a two-day voting session for a referendum that could change citizenship law and labor laws. The vote was triggered by an NGO-led grassroots campaign. According to Italy's constitution, a referendum can be called if a petition is signed by at least 500,000 voters. Results are expected after polls close on Monday at 3 p.m. local time (2pm UTC). Over 51 million Italians are eligible to participate in the vote, but the results are only binding with a 50% turnout. Italy has held 78 referendums, but the results of many of them were not enacted due to not reaching over 50% turnout. Italians voting on easing citizenship rules On the ballot are several questions related to the country's labor law, while immigration policy, a hotly contested issue in Italy, is one that has recieved the most attention. Italians will be asked if they support reducing the time required to apply for citizenship that makes it easier for children born to foreigners in Italy to obtain citizenship. Currently, a non-EU adult resident without marriage or blood ties to Italy must live in the country for 10 years before they can apply for citizenship. The referendum asks to reduce that to 5 years. Campaigners for the change in the citizenship law say it will help second-generation Italians born in the country to non-EU parents better integrate into a culture they already see as theirs. They say this reform would bring Italy's citizenship law in line with many other European countries, including Germany, adding that it would benefit around 2.5 million people. Italian voters will also choose whether they agree with greater worker protections against dismissal, access to higher severance payments, support for the conversion of fixed-term contracts into permanent ones, and about liability in cases of workplace accidents. Meloni's government urges abstention Politically, the center-left Democratic Party and other groups that oppose Italy's current government are backing the referendum and urging voters to pass the measures. But the governing right-wing coalition in Rome, led by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, is advising its supporters and the wider public not to participate, essentially hoping that the vote does not reach the 50% threshold. Meloni has said she would go to the polls but not cast a ballot, a move that was widely criticized by the left as antidemocratic. Last month's opinion polls showed that only 46% of Italians were aware of the issues driving the referendums. Turnout is projected to be around 35%, which would be well below the target for the reforms to pass. Meloni does not back the citizenship measure. Her far-right party Brothers of Italy has sought to curb illegal immigration, while increasing the number of legal work visas for migrants. She praised the current system as "excellent law, among the most open, in the sense that we have for years been among the European nations that grant the highest number of citizenships each year." Edited by: Roshni Majumdar

Stymied French politicians turn to sins of the past – DW – 06/07/2025
Stymied French politicians turn to sins of the past – DW – 06/07/2025

DW

timea day ago

  • DW

Stymied French politicians turn to sins of the past – DW – 06/07/2025

Amid parliamentary deadlock, the politics of remembrance has gained momentum in France. Three new initiatives attempt to recognize and heal historical injustices — at least symbolically. On Thursday, two years after France's controversial retirement age increase, the National Assembly voted to withdraw the reform. While the news was politically explosive because the far-right National Rally helped the left-wing opposition gain a majority in the vote, the decision hasn't yielded any actual legal results. The situation reflects the country's ongoing failure to address structural reforms since the parliamentary elections last summer, which left the government won without an absolute majority. But in the area of remembrance policy there has been significant movement. In the same week as the toothless retirement resolution, parliamentarians adopted three texts that reclassify historical events or offer the prospect of reparations. Alfred Dreyfus, shown here in the 1930s, is considered a national hero by many French people today Image: epa/AFP/dpa/picture alliance Alfred Dreyfus posthumously promoted On June 2, the French parliament voted unanimously to posthumously appoint Alfred Dreyfus to the rank of brigadier general. The Jewish officer was wrongly accused of high treason in 1894, based on falsified evidence that he revealed military secrets to the German embassy in Paris. Dreyfus subsequently spent four years in the notorious Devil's Island penal colony off the coast of French Guiana. The Franco-German dimension of the case had explosive foreign policy implications even then. The suspect's Jewish origins and his family background in the Alsace-Lorraine region, which came under German rule after the Franco-Prussian War, and strained relations with Germany, made him an ideal target for the nationalist mistrust many French people harbored at the time. Writer Émile Zola famously sided with Dreyfus in his essay "J'accuse…!", which played a critical role in the officer's exoneration and military rehabilitation in 1906. Nevertheless, after serving in the First World War as a lieutenant colonel, Dreyfus was only reinstated at a lower rank. This posthumous promotion for Dreyfus still has to pass the Senate. Alsatian MP Charles Sitzenstuhl, a member of French President Emmanuel Macron's center-right Renaissance Party, who introduced the initiative, offered a link to the present as a warning: "The anti-Semitism that plagued Alfred Dreyfus is not a thing of the distant past," he said. In June 1954, Indochinese conscripts hastily erect new fortifications for French colonial forces in Phu Ly, south of Hanoi, Vietnam Image: AP/picture alliance Recognizing returnees from Indochina Just one day after the Dreyfus vote, the National Assembly also passed a law to recognize and compensate former returnees from French Indochina after the colonial rule of territories including Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia ended in 1954. Around 44,000 people were repatriated to France, among them colonial officials, soldiers and their families, the descendants of French colonizers and local women, as well as local collaborators. Between 4,000 to 6,000 returnees ended up in temporary camps, which were often outfitted with wooden barracks that lacked heating and plumbing. Returnees were also subject to degrading policies that included bans on going out and owning cars or other luxury goods. The new law introduced by the left-wing Socialist Party now provides for financial support based on someone's length of stay in the camps. It is estimated that up to 1,600 people could claim compensation. Haiti is one of the world's poorest countries today Image: Java Reparations for Haiti? On June 5, the Assembly adopted a resolution addressing a "double debt" to Haiti that goes back to 1825. That was the year that France forced Haiti, which had declared independence in 1804, to pay compensation of 150 million gold francs. This was intended as a recognition of independence that would also compensate for the loss of French colonial possessions, including income from slaves. Haiti was forced to settle this "independence debt" over decades — a considerable economic burden that contributed to long-term poverty and instability on the island. The resolution, initiated by the Communist Party, calls for recognition, repayment and reparations for Haiti. But the text does not include concrete political steps or financial agreements. Nevertheless, the far-right National Rally voted against it. The "Senegalese riflemen," or "tirailleurs sénégalais," were a colonial infantry recruited by the French army during the First World War Image: The Print Collector/Heritage-Images/picture alliance A history of remembering Remembrance politics have some tradition in France. In 2001, the "Taubira" law, named after the parliamentarian who introduced it, recognized the slave trade and practice of slavery as crimes against humanity. The topic has been a part of school curricula in France ever since. In October 2006, the National Assembly passed a bill to criminalize the denial of the Armenian genocide of 1915 in the Ottoman Empire with a year in prison or fine of €45,000 ($51,300). The bill never came into force after it failed to pass in the Senate, and was followed by a similarly doomed initiative introduced under President Nicolas Sarkozy. That draft law passed both chambers of parliament, but was declared unconstitutional by the Constitutional Council in February 2012, which said that it amounted to unlawful interference with freedom of expression and research. Another example is the treatment of the so-called "Senegalese riflemen," the colonial soldiers from Africa who fought for France in the two world wars. For decades, many received significantly lower pensions than their French comrades, especially if they lived outside of France after decolonization. It was not until 2009 that President Sarkozy decreed an equalization of pension benefits, a step that held great symbolic significance. Social maturity or empty gestures? The latest spike in such initiatives has been met with mixed interpretations by political scientists. Some experts see the willingness to take historical responsibility as a form of social maturity. But others point out that in a politically paralyzed legislature, symbolic initiatives are easier to pass than structural reforms in areas such as pensions, education or the budget. This article was originally written in German.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store