Germany is looking at buying an Israeli anti-missile shield system that could also offer protective cover for neighboring EU states, Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Sunday.
“We must better protect ourselves against the Russian threat,” Andreas Schwarz of the SPD, who sits on the parliamentary budget committee, told Bild daily. “To do that, we need quickly an anti-missile shield for Germany.
“The Israeli Arrow 3 system is a good solution,” he added, referring to the long-range missile deterrence weapon.
According to Bild, the system, which costs two billion euros ($2.2 billion), could be operational from 2025.
“We can put the ‘Iron Dome’ over our neighboring countries. We would then play a key role for the security of Europe,” said Schwarz.
Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann, who chairs the parliamentary defense committee, confirmed that Berlin was mulling the purchase.
“Given the threat situation and the different weapons systems that Russia has, of course you have to look at that, so in that sense it makes sense,” she told Welt newspaper.
After years of under-investment in defense, Germany has announced a dramatic U-turn, shaken by Russia’s assault on its neighbor.
Scholz on February 27 in a landmark speech said Germany would earmark a special budget of 100 billion euros to bolster its defense capabilities.
He also said Berlin would spend more than two percent of its output a year on defense, outstripping NATO’s target of two percent which Germany has consistently failed to meet.