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    1. ihuntwhales1 on

      > BRUSSELS — United States arms-makers are being frozen out of the European Union’s massive new defense spending plan, which aims to splash the cash for EU and allied countries, according to defense spending plans released Wednesday.

      > Also left out — for now — is the United Kingdom.

      > “We must buy more European. Because that means strengthening the European defense technological and industrial base,” said Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in announcing the Readiness 2030 program.

      > In a bid to strengthen ties with allies, Brussels involved countries like South Korea and Japan and the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) in its program that could see as much as €800 billion spent on defense.

      > “We need to see not only Russia as a threat, but also … more global geopolitical developments and where Americans will put their strategic attention,” European Defense Commissioner Andrius Kubilius told reporters.

      > In recent years, about two-thirds of EU procurement orders have gone to U.S. defense companies.

      > The Commission presented its long-term defense policy proposal, known as a white paper, as well as a raft of legislative proposals aimed at making it easier for countries to boost military spending and to create a more integrated defense market in the bloc.

      > “We’re not doing this to go to war, but to prepare for the worst and defend peace in Europe,” said Kaja Kallas, the EU’s top diplomat.

      > The threat from Russia is the main driver for strengthening the continent’s military-industrial complex — but shifts in the U.S. under President Donald Trump are also forcing the EU to move fast.

      > The danger of relying too much on the U.S. was highlighted by Trump’s sudden decision to undermine allied Ukraine by halting arms deliveries and intelligence-sharing to pressure Kyiv into accepting peace talks with Russia.

      > Kallas pointed to how Kyiv has been hampered by relying on outsiders. “They use weapons that are not produced in Ukraine [and] sometimes there are limitations on how they can use those weapons … your military needs to really have free hands in this regard,” she said.

      > The EU strategy underlined that while the United States is “traditionally a strong ally,” it added that Washington “believes it is over-committed in Europe and needs to rebalance, reducing its historical role as a primary security guarantor.”
      Allocating the money

      > The most concrete proposal is a Commission pledge to lend up to €150 billion to member countries to be spent on defense under the so-called SAFE instrument.

      > While the loans will only be available to EU countries, friendly states from outside the bloc may also take part in joint weapons purchases.

      > Joint procurement under the SAFE proposal is open to Ukraine; EFTA’s Norway, Switzerland, Iceland and Liechtenstein; as well as “acceding countries, candidate countries and potential candidates, as well as third countries with whom the [European] Union has entered into a Security and Defence Partnership.”

      > As of the end of January, the EU had six defense and security partnerships: with Norway, Moldova, South Korea, Japan, Albania and North Macedonia.

      > Turkey and Serbia, as EU candidate countries, could also potentially join.

      > That leaves out the U.S. and the U.K. — although Britain’s status could change. “We are working on having this defense and security partnership with U.K. I’m really hoping that for the summit which is in May, we can have results,” Kallas said.

      > Canada has also made clear it wants a tighter security relationship with the EU. The Commission on Wednesday also floated greater defense cooperation with Australia, New Zealand and India.

      > “There are lot of requests across the globe to cooperate with us,” said a senior EU official.

      > The preferential treatment for European companies is a bid to appease France, one of Europe’s leading arms producers.

      > In a further attempt to tighten the screws on non-EU companies, the deal bans foreign countries from accessing classified information.

      > It also sets a minimum threshold that 65 percent of the components eligible for funding must be European, with that definition including Ukraine and Norway. The planned fund would exclude weapons systems where a non-EU country has design authority — meaning controlling its constructions or use. That would seem to cover most joint ventures producing U.S. military equipment in the EU.

      > The loans will finance joint projects by two or more members in a bid to create an EU-wide defense industry. “We do away with fragmentation precisely by incentivizing member states to get together” and buy the same weapons at a better price, said an EU official.

      > In an attempt to kickstart arms purchases immediately, the Commission will allow EU countries to place orders individually for the first 12 months.

      > The plans released Wednesday also allow EU member countries to get around the bloc’s strict budget limits. They will be able to overshoot the EU’s public spending limit up to a maximum of 1.5 percent of GDP for a period of four years.

      > The deadline for requesting loans is June 30, 2027, and countries may receive the cash until the end of 2030. They must repay loans to the Commission within 45 years.

    2. Few-Detective-9620 on

      We should consider UK part of this strategy, even if they are not any more in EU.

    3. DarthTomatoo on

      Anyone understand exactly why the UK was excluded?

      The impression given earlier this month was that it would be a joint venture, or at least a close cooperation.

    4. supercooltwat on

      Domestic production and job creation are great way of maintaining military strength in times of economic hardship. Well done EU.
      Good call.

    5. Body_Languagee on

      >**United States arms-makers are being frozen out** of the European Union’s massive new defense spending plan, which aims to **splash the cash for EU and allied countries**, according to defense spending plans released Wednesday.

      AUCH… 

    6. KoalaCapable8130 on

      Good job Europe. Keep up the pace and send troops to Ukraine.

    7. harmlessdonkey on

      Seems EFTA is included. Any purchase from the Swiss must come without any strings attached.

    8. edparadox on

      It’s more like a plan for the EU, so, of course, the US, the UK, and Turkey are not part of it.

      No need to be butthurt or try to depict it as something else.

    9. The last thing we want is having Russia attacking us and not being able to defend ourselves with american weapons because the orange Jesus pulls the plug to please his buddy Vlad.

    10. YouCanLookItUp on

      Looks like it’s time for a defense agreement with Canada.

    11. scotswaehey on

      Awesome Agent orange has taken European countries from being happy to buy from the American military complex to Buying from their selfs and becoming competition 😂😂😂

    12. Lari-Fari on

      Always these politico headlines trying to stirr up shit.. how about: „EU reacts reasonably to US antagonistic antics.“

    13. Sacu-Shi on

      So the US is tariffing trading partners, causing higher prices for its people, , threatening to annex geographical neighbours, and now is losing customers for its military industrial complex.

      Are they great again yet?

    14. DarrensDodgyDenim on

      Considering how they excluded Airbus from deals in favour of Boeing, they can’t complain one iota.

    15. CapitanianExtinction on

      Well, at least the price of eggs will come down.  Oh wait…

    16. Helpful-Isopod-6536 on

      Now the defence sector is going to get fucked too. Good job mango messiah.

    17. KingKeegan2001 on

      I mean why should Europe deal with us when we as a nation are constantly antagonizing them in favor of suck off Russia. Yeah I’m all for Europe excluding us. Also Europe  needs to consider making us remove our military bases. I’m sure the pentagon would love that trump is fucking with logistics.

      Foe real trump and maga believes we can go at this alone all the while we can see the nation is begging for help or acting like things are all good.

      Until trump is gone until maga as a concept and ideology is gone the world should cut us off until we act right.

    18. TurbulentEbb4674 on

      This is exactly what Donald Trump told Europe to do 😂🤣😂

    19. Disco425 on

      So our genius business man and great negotiator just lost the entire EU defense market for American companies, and he did that in all of 2 months flat. Worth at least $50 billion a year.

      If Biden or Obama did that, the GOP would want him impeached the next day. Instead, not a goddamn peep…..

    20. EnergyAltruistic6757 on

      Is the “removing american military bases” in the plan? Because it should.

    21. sayko666 on

      One day Trump will say it is ok to sell US weapons to Russia if EU is not interested anymore, anda MAGA will support him.

      Nothing is impossible anymore.

    22. Far_Introduction4024 on

      This is something I’ve always believed with essential to European security, I get it, once, then twice burned at the altar of all-consuming war that eviscerated Europe for generations. you’ve been relucted for decades to build up your militaries, the US was always there, so you could put your money into social safety nets which you could never truly afford if you built up your militaries again.

      Companies like Krupp..once of of Germany’s best ordinance manufacturers, gets bought out and merges with Thyssen and goes into construction and engineering…time to break up that party, and get them back into the arms business. You should be pumping out Leopard II like no tomorrow. England needs to be brought back into the fold.

      In my time in the US military, having done exercises with foreign militaries, the Brits in my opinion were the most professional, the most disciplined. the Spaniards….great at knife fighting, cold weather training bar non were the Norwegians and Finns. The French need to take lessons from their Foreign Legion in terms of recruit training.

      It is time to put aside a Millenia of independence as smaller nation-states. You need to go the distance, create the Pax Europa, and put real governing capability into the European Parliament. One country, one foreign policy, and one military.

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