
Macron announces €6.5 billion in extra military spending in next two years
The French leader laid out the spending plans in a sweeping speech calling for intensified efforts to protect Europe. He said France will aim to spend €64 billion in annual defense spending in 2027, the last year of his second term. That would be double the €32 billion in annual spending when he became president in 2017.
"Since 1945, freedom has never been so threatened, and never so seriously," Macron said, in the French president's traditional speech to the military on the eve of the Bastille Day national holiday. "To be free in this world we must be feared. To be feared we must be powerful," he said.
He insisted that France can find the money to spend more on the military, even as it tries to bring down massive debts. Conservative and far-right parties have supported greater defense spending, while left-wing parties accuse the government of sacrificing hard-won social welfare benefits for military spending.
Europe is in danger because of Russia's war in Ukraine and wars in the Middle East, and because "the United States has added a form of uncertainty," Macron said. He also cited online disinformation campaigns by unnamed foreign governments and propaganda operations targeting children, in "the screen era."
Macron also ordered France's top military and defense officials to start a "strategic dialogue" with European partners about the role that France's nuclear arsenal could play in protecting Europe. France and Britain agreed recently to cooperate on nuclear arsenal issues.

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