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Post-war rules-based system is up for negotiation, Eurogroup president tells Euronews

Post-war rules-based system is up for negotiation, Eurogroup president tells Euronews

Yahoo16-05-2025

Rules and institutions established under US leadership in the aftermath of World War II are up in the air and up for negotiation, Irish Finance Minister and Eurogroup President Paschal Donohoe has told Euronews in an interview.
With the United States threatening to withdraw defence support from Europe, the continent has been looking to strengthen its military resources. But according to Donohoe, this is not the only challenge that Europe has to face after Donald Trump's arrival at the White House.
'A theme of what is now happening is the rules, the institutions that were set up in the aftermath of World War II, set up with American leadership. They're now being challenged, they're being contested," Donohoe said.
"The institutions that we know, the rules in relation to trade and tax, are all now open for renegotiation. That is now what is happening."
Donohoe was clear that no one should assume progress is inevitable, echoing statements by French President Emmanuel Macron and former Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi that Europe is vulnerable and mortal. "Our Europe is mortal. It can die," said Macron, while Draghi talked about the risk of a 'slow and agonising death.'
For the president of the Eurogroup, 'All political order, if not capable of dying, is capable of declining. That is one of the many lessons that we have from the study of history. The European Union is no different. If you believe progress is inevitable, you're on your way to seeing that progress decline,'' he said.
As the Irish defence minister, Donohoe remains sceptical about common borrowing for defence. He advocated for common borrowing to recover from the COVID-19 crisis, but is not convinced when it comes to military spending, believing national contributions should bridge funding gaps needed to rearm Europe.
"It's likely that progress will be made in areas of procurement. Therefore, that means that if there is a defence dimension to the next multiannual financial framework (MFF) and the EU budgets, I still think it's likely to be smaller than the national contribution that members make to their own security and the security of the EU,' Donohoe said.
He pointed out that the EU is still repaying the COVID-19 recovery fund (RRF) designed to make EU economies more resilient during the pandemic. An evaluation of the RRF is needed before the EU embarks on new commitments, he said.
He underlined the need for a more global picture of defence spending since defence will also be a dimension of the next multiannual budget of the European Union. Member states will soon start negotiating the next spending period, running from 2028 to 2034.
'It's difficult to have that debate and not divorce us from the broader reality that firstly we'll be negotiating a budget for the new European Union,
"Secondly, Next Generation EU, which is the new form of common borrowing that we have to deal with the crisis of a number of years ago of the pandemic, that is still happening and still being evaluated and thus in relation to all of that both still has to issue and still has be refinanced and dealt with at some point in the future, all of those things are going to come together,'' he said.
Donohoe is running for a third term as leader of the Eurogroup, and so far, the names of other possible candidates have not been made public. He said he felt encouraged by the level of support he currently has, though he acknowledged no one can ever be too sure about what comes next.
'An awful lot can happen in a number of weeks in the world that we're in, but I am encouraged by the support I've currently received,' Donohoe concluded.

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The UK seeks to send a message to Moscow as it outlines higher defense spending
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The UK seeks to send a message to Moscow as it outlines higher defense spending

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The UK seeks to send a message to Moscow as it outlines higher defense spending

time32 minutes ago

The UK seeks to send a message to Moscow as it outlines higher defense spending

LONDON -- The U.K. is about to see the biggest increase in defense spending since the end of the Cold War as it seeks to send "a message to Moscow," the British defense secretary said Sunday. John Healey said the Labour government's current plans for defense spending will be enough to transform the country's military following decades of retrenchment, though he does not expect the number of soldiers — currently at a historic low — to rise until the early 2030s. He said plans for defense spending to hit 2.5% of national income by 2027, which amounts to an extra 13 billion pounds ($17 billion) or so a year, were 'on track' and that there was 'no doubt' it would hit 3% in the next parliament in the early 2030s. The government will on Monday respond to a strategic defense review, overseen by Healey and led by Lord George Robertson, a former NATO secretary general and defense secretary in a previous Labour government. It is expected to be the most consequential review since the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and make a series of recommendations for the U.K. to deal with the new threat environment, both on the military front and in cyberspace. Like other NATO members, the U.K. has been compelled to take a closer look at its defense spending since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. 'This is a message to Moscow,' Healey told the BBC. 'This is Britain standing behind, making our armed forces stronger but making our industrial base stronger, and this is part of our readiness to fight, if required.' U.S. President Donald Trump has also piled pressure on NATO members to bolster their defense spending. And in recent months, European countries, led by the U.K. and France, have scrambled to coordinate their defense posture as Trump transforms American foreign policy, seemingly sidelining Europe as he looks to end the war in Ukraine. Trump has long questioned the value of NATO and complained that the U.S. provides security to European countries that don't pull their weight. Healey also said Russia is 'attacking the U.K. daily' as part of some 90,000 cyber attacks from state-linked sources that were directed at the U.K,'s defense over the last two years. A cyber command to counter such threats is expected to be set up as part of the review. 'The tensions are greater but we prepare for war in order to secure the peace,' he said. 'If you're strong enough to defeat an enemy, you deter them from attacking in the first place.' While on a visit to a factory on Saturday where Storm Shadow missiles are assembled, Healey said the government would support the procurement of up to 7,000 U.K.-built long-range weapons and that new funding will see U.K. munitions spending hitting 6 billion pounds in the coming years. 'Six billion over the next five years in factories like this which allow us not just to produce the munitions that equip our forces for the future but to create the jobs in every part of the U.K.,' he said. Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary for the main opposition Conservative Party, welcomed the government's pledge to increase defense spending but said he was 'skeptical' as to whether the Treasury would deliver. He called on the government to be more ambitious and raise spending to 3% of national income within this parliament, which can run until 2029.

The UK seeks to send a message to Moscow as it outlines higher defense spending
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San Francisco Chronicle​

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  • San Francisco Chronicle​

The UK seeks to send a message to Moscow as it outlines higher defense spending

LONDON (AP) — The U.K. is about to see the biggest increase in defense spending since the end of the Cold War as it seeks to send "a message to Moscow," the British defense secretary said Sunday. John Healey said the Labour government's current plans for defense spending will be enough to transform the country's military following decades of retrenchment, though he does not expect the number of soldiers — currently at a historic low — to rise until the early 2030s. He said plans for defense spending to hit 2.5% of national income by 2027, which amounts to an extra 13 billion pounds ($17 billion) or so a year, were 'on track' and that there was 'no doubt' it would hit 3% in the next parliament in the early 2030s. The government will on Monday respond to a strategic defense review, overseen by Healey and led by Lord George Robertson, a former NATO secretary general and defense secretary in a previous Labour government. It is expected to be the most consequential review since the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and make a series of recommendations for the U.K. to deal with the new threat environment, both on the military front and in cyberspace. Like other NATO members, the U.K. has been compelled to take a closer look at its defense spending since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. 'This is a message to Moscow,' Healey told the BBC. 'This is Britain standing behind, making our armed forces stronger but making our industrial base stronger, and this is part of our readiness to fight, if required.' U.S. President Donald Trump has also piled pressure on NATO members to bolster their defense spending. And in recent months, European countries, led by the U.K. and France, have scrambled to coordinate their defense posture as Trump transforms American foreign policy, seemingly sidelining Europe as he looks to end the war in Ukraine. Trump has long questioned the value of NATO and complained that the U.S. provides security to European countries that don't pull their weight. Healey also said Russia is 'attacking the U.K. daily' as part of some 90,000 cyber attacks from state-linked sources that were directed at the U.K,'s defense over the last two years. A cyber command to counter such threats is expected to be set up as part of the review. 'The tensions are greater but we prepare for war in order to secure the peace,' he said. 'If you're strong enough to defeat an enemy, you deter them from attacking in the first place.' While on a visit to a factory on Saturday where Storm Shadow missiles are assembled, Healey said the government would support the procurement of up to 7,000 U.K.-built long-range weapons and that new funding will see U.K. munitions spending hitting 6 billion pounds in the coming years. 'Six billion over the next five years in factories like this which allow us not just to produce the munitions that equip our forces for the future but to create the jobs in every part of the U.K.,' he said. Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary for the main opposition Conservative Party, welcomed the government's pledge to increase defense spending but said he was 'skeptical' as to whether the Treasury would deliver. He called on the government to be more ambitious and raise spending to 3% of national income within this parliament, which can run until 2029.

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