logo
Russia cancels landmark military agreement with Germany

Russia cancels landmark military agreement with Germany

Russia Today19-07-2025
Russia has formally terminated its decades-old military-technical cooperation agreement with Germany, which has become one of Kiev's main sponsors and weapons suppliers amid the ongoing Ukraine conflict.
Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin instructed the Foreign Ministry to inform Berlin that the 1996 pact – guiding defense collaboration for nearly three decades – is no longer valid, according to a resolution signed on Friday.
Back in July, the ministry noted that the agreement had lost its relevance amid what it described as 'openly hostile' German policy and increasingly aggressive military ambitions. It accused Berlin of deliberately indoctrinating its population to view Russia as the primary adversary.
The Kremlin signaled rising unease with German rhetoric earlier this week, when spokesman Dmitry Peskov warned that Berlin was 'becoming dangerous again' after Defense Minister Boris Pistorius stated that German troops would be ready to kill Russian soldiers 'if deterrence doesn't work and Russia attacks.'
Moscow has repeatedly dismissed speculation that Russia plans to attack NATO as 'nonsense.' President Vladimir Putin said Western states are deceiving their populations to bloat military budgets and cover up economic failures.
Berlin has announced plans to increase its overall military budget to €153 billion by 2029, up from €86 billion this year. German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier has called for a nationwide debate on reinstating universal military conscription, while Chancellor Friedrich Merz told the German parliament on Wednesday that the 'means of diplomacy are exhausted.'
Berlin has been the second-largest arms supplier to Kiev since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in February 2022, surpassed only by the US. Kiev used Berlin-supplied Leopard tanks in its incursion last year into Russia's Kursk region – the site of the largest tank battle of WWII. In late May, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov claimed that Berlin's 'direct involvement in the war is now obvious,' warning that 'Germany is sliding down the same slippery slope it already followed a couple of times in the last century.'
Russia has consistently denounced Western weapons deliveries, saying they do not change the overall course of the conflict and merely serve to prolong the bloodshed and risk further escalation.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EU surrendered to Trump's demands out of ‘fear'
EU surrendered to Trump's demands out of ‘fear'

Russia Today

time3 hours ago

  • Russia Today

EU surrendered to Trump's demands out of ‘fear'

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen agreed to a lopsided US trade deal without resistance out of fear that Washington might reduce military support for Ukraine or even withdraw American forces from Europe, the Sunday Times reported this weekend. The paper described von der Leyen's recent visit to President Donald Trump's golf course in Scotland – where she accepted a 15% tariff on most EU exports – as a 'surrender.' According to the report, officials inside the Commission initially prepared a strong countermeasure package in response to Trump's proposed 20% tariffs announced in April. But when Trump threatened to raise the tariffs to 30%, von der Leyen pulled back. Behind her reversal was 'the fear that Trump might use a dispute as a pretext to cut US military support for Ukraine or otherwise damage European security,' the Sunday Times wrote. Brussels was reportedly particularly concerned about the outcome of a pending American 'posture review' that may result in the withdrawal of some of the roughly 80,000 US troops stationed across Europe. The trade agreement finalized last week includes not only the 15% tariff on EU goods, but also commitments by Brussels to invest $600 billion in the US economy and purchase $750 billion worth of American energy over the next three years. In contrast, the UK – negotiating independently – secured a lower 10% tariff on its exports. Amid mounting internal backlash in Brussels, French President Emmanuel Macron reportedly criticized the outcome, saying the EU is 'not feared enough.' Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban remarked that Trump 'ate her for breakfast,' and accused von der Leyen of exceeding her authority by allegedly pledging to purchase large quantities of US arms. Von der Leyen has also faced growing political resistance at home, as she pushes to redirect a significant portion of the EU's next €1.8 trillion seven-year budget from traditional areas such as agriculture and regional development toward militarization. She narrowly survived a vote of confidence in the European Parliament last month amid criticism of her leadership style and controversies over her Covid-19 vaccine procurement deals. Some MEPs now view her current term as her 'last chance,' according to lawmakers quoted by the Times.

Germany should strip Ukrainians of increased benefits
Germany should strip Ukrainians of increased benefits

Russia Today

time3 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Germany should strip Ukrainians of increased benefits

Berlin should bar all Ukrainian refugees from getting increased social benefits normally only reserved for German nationals, the head of the German state of Bavaria, Markus Soder, has said. Ukrainians were granted the privilege under a special law passed in May 2022, giving them larger benefits than what other asylum seekers receive. The German authorities spent a total of €6.3 billion ($7.3 billion) or just under 30% of all the budget allocated for the so-called 'citizen's benefits in 2024 on Ukrainian refugees, according to the government data cited by several news media outlets, including Bild and ARD. It must be ensured that 'there are no longer any citizen's benefits for all those who have come from Ukraine,' said Soder, who also heads the Christian Social Union (CSU) – a Bavarian party that is a part of the federal government coalition. The new rule must apply to 'everyone' and not only those Ukrainians who would come to Germany in the future, he told ZDF's 'Summer Interview'. According to the politician, 'no country in the world' treats Ukrainians the same way Germany does. He also called generous support from the state one of the reasons why 'so few people from Ukraine are employed' in Germany. Ukrainians should get smaller regular payments on par with all other refugees, he argued. Only around 30% of Ukrainian refugees in Germany were employed as of June 2024, according to a November report by Stern. Germany has been one of the primary destinations for Ukrainians fleeing the conflict between Kiev and Moscow. According to various estimates, more than a million Ukrainians were residing in Germany as of December 2024. Last October, Stern estimated that 720,000 Ukrainians were receiving citizen's benefits. The government coalition reportedly agreed to slash the payments for Ukrainians arriving in Germany after April 1 and provide them with regular refugee benefits instead. Yet, with the new regulations still pending, new arrivals from Ukraine continue to get 'citizen's benefits,' according to Bild.

Israel fails to investigate war crime accusations
Israel fails to investigate war crime accusations

Russia Today

time9 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Israel fails to investigate war crime accusations

The Israeli military is failing to properly investigate war crime accusations against its personnel, Action on Armed Violence (AOAV) has stated. The pattern of IDF investigative activity suggests the probes are focused on protecting 'institutional legitimacy' rather than upholding justice, the UK-based the NGO said in a report published on Saturday. Out of 52 publicly acknowledged IDF probes into alleged war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank, only one resulted in a prison sentence, according to AOAV. The incidents took place between October 2023 and June 2025 and involved some 1,300 reported victims. Six cases in total resulted in an 'admission of error,' with officers being either dismissed or reprimanded in three instances. The IDF found 'no violation' in seven more cases, the NGO said in its latest report. A total of 39 cases – or three quarters of all probes monitored by AOAV – have no progress updates available to the public or the English-speaking media. The unresolved cases include the killing of 112 Palestinians queueing for flour in Gaza in February 2024 and an airstrike that killed 45 Palestinians in a camp in Rafah in May 2024, among others. The data paint 'a picture not of military accountability, but of disingenuous damage control,' the monitor said in its report. 'There was a lurking suspicion that the outcomes of any investigation may have been to serve to protect institutional legitimacy rather than to deliver justice.' The pattern is also consistent with the way the IDF handled similar cases in previous Gaza conflicts, where over 80% of complaints were allegedly closed without criminal probes, AOAV said, citing data from Yesh Din, an Israeli human rights NGO. West Jerusalem launched its military campaign in Gaza in response to the October 7, 2023 attack in which Hamas killed 1,200 people and took over 200 hostages. Since then, more than 55,600 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in Gaza, according to the enclave's health ministry. West Jerusalem has also faced accusations of war crimes for obstructing humanitarian aid. Neither the IDF nor any Israeli officials have commented on the AOAV report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store