Since Russias invasion of Ukraine, the nation has stepped up as a leader on military and diplomatic fronts.
Lord Hastings Ismay, NATOs first secretary general, famously said NATOs mission is to keep the Russians out, the Americans in and the Germans down.
Seventy-five years later, two-thirds of Ismays formula remains unchanged: NATO still seeks to keep the Russians out of alliance territory and still seeks to keep the Americans in the alliance. But one part is different: Todays NATO wants and needs Germany to step up.
Changes During his tour as U.S. ambassador to Germany, Dan Coats , Many people fear their weaknesses. Germans seem to be afraid of their strengths. A self-confident German identity, coupled with modesty and without denying the past, can be constructive and appreciated by the world.
Coats shared that insight in 2005. He was right, but the irony is that by 2005, Germany had retreated from the constructive role it played in bolstering NATO and deterring Moscow during much of the Cold War.
At the height of the Cold War, West Germany deployed 2,125 tanks and more than 500,000 troops. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Germanys muscular military capabilities dramatically atrophied. By 2014, Germany had fewer than 300 tanks and less than 178,000 troops. The German military was so badly underequipped that German troops used to simulate machine guns during a 2014 NATO exercise. And it was so strategically stunted and morally confused that German soldiers were to shout warnings in three languages before engaging Taliban terrorists in Afghanistan.
Equally troubling, German leaders at Vladimir Putins behavior, NATO efforts to deter Putin, with Putin on development projects and even Putin.
That all changed Feb. 24, 2022. When Putin attempted to conquer Ukraine, Germany began to re-embrace its strengths and return to its central role in transatlantic security.
Shocked by Putins full-scale invasion of Ukraine, shocked Putin by rushing antitank weapons and surface-to-air missiles to Ukraine. Germany then canceled a pipeline construction deal with Russia, announced a nearly doubling of defense spending to (something Washington had been begging Berlin to do since ) and created a .
The world, then-German Chancellor Olaf Scholz concluded, will no longer be the same as the world before.
Nor would Germany.
Germanys new governing coalition, led by Chancellor Friedrich Merz, is even more committed to helping Ukraine, strengthening NATO and deterring Putin.
Ukraine receives 65% of Germanys arms exports. Germany has $15.6 billion in military equipment to Ukraine, including hundreds of tanks, infantry fighting vehicles and armored personnel carriers; scores of howitzers, multiple-launch rocket systems and air-defense systems; more than a million rounds of heavy ammunition; and thousands of anti-tank systems.
Germany recently began shipping Ukraine the first batch of 10,000 radar-evading . German arms manufacturer Rheinmetall is building four inside Ukraine (one is already ). And Berlin has signed a security with Ukraine pledging long-term support in intelligence, air defense, artillery, armor and ammunition (which Germany is producing in enormous numbers). Germany has quadrupled 155mm artillery-shell production since 2022 and will produce 1.1 million 155mm rounds annually by 2027.
NATO As to strengthening NATO and deterring Putin, German lawmakers this year approved a paving the way for Germany to invest $1 trillion into defense-related infrastructure over the coming decade.
Merz calls the new fund a clear message to our partners but also to the enemies of our freedom: We are capable of defending ourselves. He vows that his government will provide all the financing the Bundeswehr needs to become the strongest conventional army in Europe.
Toward that end, Germany is expanding the size of the Bundeswehr to 203,000 troops. German defense officials are prepared to to reach those troop levels.
Unlike in Lord Ismays time, when memories of Nazi aggression pervaded allied thinking, Merz that our friends and partners expect this of us. Indeed, NATO Germany to generate seven more brigades (about 40,000 troops) to enhance the deterrent capabilities of the alliance. Germany, Merz declares, is ready to assume more responsibility within NATO.
Already, Germany leads NATOs battlegroup in Lithuania and is building a in Lithuania Germanys first base abroad since World War II for more than 4,800 German combat troops.
German fighter-jets are leading NATOs Air Policing Mission in the skies over .
Germany plays a key role in a NATO effort to deter, detect and interdict Russian and Chinese attacks against undersea cables in the Baltic Sea.
Germany is partnering with NATO allies Poland and the Netherlands to develop military corridors to enable allied troops and equipment to move rapidly from Polish, German and Dutch ports to NATOs eastern flank.
Germany is spearheading the , an integrated air-defense effort enfolding 21 European allies.
To deter Putins army and answer his the United States and Germany agreed during last summers NATO summit to hypersonic weapons, Tomahawk land-attack missiles and systems on German territory. At this years NATO summit, Germany to an alliance-wide plan to invest 5% of GDP on defense-related programs.
Germany also is leading on the diplomatic front.
It is of paramount importance that the political West not let itself be divided, Merz argues, so I will continue to make every effort to produce the greatest possible unity between the European and American partners. Thus, Berlin arranged a to ensure that NATO allies were on the ahead of Ukraine-Russia ceasefire talks, joined Britain and France in to reimpose heavy sanctions on Iran in response to Tehrans outlaw nuclear program, and with EU, Israeli and Arab partners the delivery of food aid to Gaza.
Beyond NATO Importantly, the transformation of Germanys approach to security what one member of Merzs bloc in the Bundestag describes as a paradigm shift is not confined to Europe.
In addition to Ukraine, Germany is shipping arms to fellow democracies Poland, India, Greece, Brazil, South Korea, Britain and Israel.
In fact, Germany is Israels second-largest arms provider, representing 30% of Israels overall military aid. After Hamas assault on Israel, Germany rushed 3,000 antitank weapons and 500,000 rounds of ammunition to Israel.
The past two years have seen South Korea and Germany sign an intelligence-sharing , German warplanes train with Japanese warplanes in and with multiple allied air forces in Australias exercises, through the Taiwan Strait and other , and German soldiers continue ongoing in support of the Iraqi military.
In mid-2024, Germany and Japan signed an enabling their armed forces to share fuel and ammunition. Germany and Japan are planning . And the two longtime U.S. allies are finalizing for cooperation on missile technology, manned aircraft and unmanned systems.
Along with Germanys recommitment to NATO and newfound commitment to the rest of the free world, Merz has conveyed clarity on strategic threats.
For instance, he views the Russian siege of Ukraine as one front of Putins war of aggression against Europe.
This terrible war and its outcome will not only determine the fate of Ukraine, Merz . Its outcome will determine whether law and justice continue to apply in Europe and the world or whether tyranny, military violence and the naked law of the strongest will prevail.
Unlike some of his predecessors and some of his NATO counterparts, Merz is under no illusions about Putins designs. Anyone who believes Russia would be content with a victory over Ukraine or parts of Ukraine, or the annexation of parts of the country, is wrong, he bluntly .
Germany also is expressing moral clarity on the world stage.
There is no reason to criticize what Israel started a week ago and also no reason to criticize what America did, Merz said after the United States and Israel targeted Irans nuclear sites and missile program. They are doing something that is also in our interest, he added, without a hint of equivocation.
Our common freedom, Merz concludes, the men who waged and won the Cold War, does not end at a geopolitical line it ends where we stop defending it.
Add it all up, and a strong and free Germany appears poised yet again to bolster NATO, to defend our common freedom and to deter our common enemies.
Alan W. Dowd serves as director of the Sagamore Institute Center for America's Purpose. Any opinions expressed in this article are strictly his own.
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