Who Will Defend Germany If the Germans Won’t?
An airport vehicle patrols the grounds of Munich Airport. after drone sightings this month.
Photographer: picture alliance/picture allianceWhen an incursion of Russian drones forced Warsaw airport to shut down last month, Poland immediately shot them down. When unidentified drones forced Munich airport to suspend operations this month, German authorities provided snacks for stranded passengers while police helicopters monitored the air space. As strange as it may sound, Germany’s military isn’t allowed to defend German airspace against anything short of a full-scale invasion. It’s just one roadblock of many in the way of making Germany fighting fit.
On paper, Berlin has a free pass to strengthen national defense. With military spending above 1% gross domestic product exempted from borrowing restrictions, there is effectively no limit on funding of the military, known as the Bundeswehr. But as the drone dilemma indicates, Germany faces more daunting obstacles to defending itself as the neighborhood gets increasingly dangerous.