Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Time For A US Missile Mutual Assurance Pact For Asia


(MENAFN- Asia Times) In the shadow of Russia's grinding war in Ukraine, Europe is stirring from a long slumber on defense. On November 14, the United States approved a US$3.5 billion arms deal that will arm Germany with 173 Standard Missile-6 interceptors and 577 Standard Missile-2s, the largest such transaction in years.

These are not just weapons. They are the backbone for Berlin's new F127 frigates, outfitted with Aegis systems to shield NATO's flanks from ballistic threats and cruise missiles. It is a stark reminder of how quickly necessity can rewrite priorities. Just three years ago, Germany balked at sending even lethal aid to Kyiv.

Today, it is racing to rebuild an arsenal that atrophied after the Cold War, part of a broader European surge that will push collective defense spending to 381 billion euros this year alone, up from 343 billion euros in 2024. This is not panic buying. It is the continent finally reckoning with the costs of complacency.

The shift feels almost seismic, yet it echoes patterns we have seen before. Think back to the early 1980s, when NATO's deployment of Pershing missiles forced a similar introspection across Europe. Then, as now, external pressure (first Soviet adventurism, today Russian revanchism) exposed the fragility of underinvestment.

The numbers tell the story. European military outlays, including Russia, jumped 17% last year to $693 billion, with projections for further climbs in 2025. NATO's June summit in Vilnius even floated a long-term target of 5% of GDP on security spending by 2035, a figure that would dwarf the longstanding 2% pledge.

For the United States, this is welcome news. It eases the transatlantic burden, allowing Washington to redirect resources from Europe's eastern edge. But in a world of finite budgets and infinite threats, relief in one theater demands vigilance in another.

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Asia Times

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