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MILITARY

Why the US plans to station long range missiles in Germany

From 2026 the US plans to station far-reaching weapons systems in Germany, according to a joint announcement by the two countries. The move signals a clear intention by the current US administration to back its NATO allies in Europe.

missile launch
A Standard Missile (SM) fires from a US Navy ship. The US can currently fire long-fire weapons from some aircraft carriers and submarines. Now it plans to deploy launch sites on land in Germany. Photo by Jared HALLAHAN / Navy Office of Information / AFP

For the first time since the Cold War, the US plans to station weapons systems in Germany that could reach as far as Russia.

From 2026, Germany could host weapons such as SM-6 anti-aircraft missiles, Tomahawk cruise missiles and developmental hypersonic weapons with a longer range than those currently held in Europe.

These deployments are a step toward longer-term stationing of long-fire weapons in Germany.

Additionally, US President Biden announced that Denmark and the Netherlands had begun sending US-made F-16 jets to Ukraine – making good on a key promise last year to Kyiv, which has struggled to match Russia’s air capabilities.

End of a key disarmament treaty

Germany hasn’t had ground-based missiles with a range exceeding 500 kilometres in over 30 years, due to a disarmament treaty that seems to have run its course.

The Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty had prohibited the use of such weapons. It was signed by the Soviet Union’s Mikhail Gorbachev and former U.S. President Ronald Reagan in 1987.

Germany, Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic all followed suit, destroying their missiles in the 1990s. Slovakia and Bulgaria also joined later on.

But the US withdrew from the treaty in 2019, suggesting that Russia had violated the agreement by developing a ground-launched cruise missile.

With the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty effectively dead, NATO and Russia appear to be inching toward a Cold-War style arms race. Russia has since said it should resume production of intermediate and shorter range nuclear-capable missiles, and the US has moved to position these kinds of weapons in Europe and Asia.

NATO is preparing for dark times

The US-German announcement, which was issued on Wednesday July 10th, is certainly a strong signal to Russia. It comes at the end of NATO’s 75th anniversary summit, where it was also announced that Ukraine was on an “irreversible path to NATO membership”.

Biden speaks to NATO

US President Joe Biden speaks during the meeting of the North Atlantic Council to Heads of State and Government during the NATO 75th anniversary summit. (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP)

In addition to deploying the long-fire weapons capabilities, the US army base in Wiesbaden is to be NATO’s hub for coordinated arms deliveries and training activities for the Ukrainian armed forces. 

Some 700 personnel are to be deployed for the new NATO command, of which Germany wants to provide up to 40, including a two-star general as deputy commander.

An effort to strengthen Germany – US ties

The NATO project may also be a precaution ahead of the possible return of Donald Trump to the US presidency from January 2025.

During his previous term, Trump threatened to withdraw the US from NATO and railed against what he considered to be low defence spending by European allies. In his current campaign he has said the US shouldn’t offer protection to NATO countries that did not meet their financial obligations.

Since the beginning of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine, Biden had increased the US military’s troop presence in Germany and Europe. 

“We can, and will, defend every inch of NATO territory and we’ll do it together,” Biden reiterated at the recent NATO summit.

But with Trump well ahead in polls in the US, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz seems interested in strengthening ties between the US and German militaries while he still can.

The deployment of further US weapons in Germany will make it harder for future US presidents to pull the US out of its alliance.

With reporting by DPA and AFP.

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MILITARY

German army activates air-defence system over Russia threat

Germany's military put a first Iris-T air-defence system into service on its own soil on Wednesday having delivered several of them to war-torn Ukraine to intercept Russian rockets, drones and missiles.

German army activates air-defence system over Russia threat

Chancellor Olaf Scholz said the surface-to-air system was part of a build-up of German and European defences launched after Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the Ukraine invasion in 2022.

“Russia has been massively rearming for many years, especially in the field of rockets and cruise missiles,” Scholz said at the inauguration ceremony at a base in Todendorf near the northern city of Hamburg.

Putin had broken disarmament treaties and “deployed missiles as far as Kaliningrad”, a Russian exclave located some 530 kilometres (330 miles) from Berlin, he added.

“It would be negligent not to respond to this appropriately,” the chancellor said. “A failure to act would put peace at risk. I will not allow that.”

Scholz, who was joined by Defence Minister Boris Pistorius, said the system was part of the European Sky Shield Initiative, which also includes long-range defences against ballistic missiles.

The German military has ordered six of the Iris-T SLM systems at a total cost of 950 million euros ($1 million) from manufacturer Diehl Defence, to be delivered by May 2027.

Iris-T success in Ukraine

Germany, the second-largest contributor of military aid to Ukraine after the United States, has already supplied four Iris-T SLM systems to Ukraine and pledged another eight.

Ukraine’s Defence Minister Rustem Umerov was visiting Germany on Wednesday, a day after a Russian missile attack killed at least 51 people in the Ukrainian city of Poltava, one of the single deadliest bombardments of the war.

The Iris-T systems sent to Ukraine feature truck-mounted launchers that fire missiles to intercept aerial threats at a range of up to 40 kilometres (25 miles).

Scholz said that “in Ukraine, Iris-T has shot down over 250 rockets, drones and cruise missiles to date and saved countless lives”.

The German leader said that Europe, aside from defensive systems, would also need more precision missiles of its own “so that there is no dangerous gap with Russia in this strategically important field”.

In July, Washington and Berlin announced that the “episodic deployments” of long-range US missiles, including Tomahawk cruise missiles, to Germany would begin in 2026.

Scholz stressed that “our sole concern is to deter potential attackers. Every attack on us must mean a risk for the attacker. Our concern is to secure peace here and prevent war, and nothing else.”

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