Frances' parliament approves multi-billion-euro military spending boost, spurred by Russia's war in Ukraine


France’s parliament on Thursday approved a multi-billion-euro boost to military spending through the rest of this decade, spurred by Russia’s war in Ukraine and fast-growing global threats.

President Emmanuel Macron pushed for the bigger budget, which would spend $450 billion, the most significant spending hike in half a century. The money would modernize France’s nuclear arsenal, augment intelligence spending and develop more remote-controlled weapons.

He has argued the boost was needed to ensure “our freedom, our security, our prosperity, our place in the world.” The defense minister has compared it to France’s push in the 1960s to develop nuclear weapons, making the country one of the world’s bigger military powers.

FRANCE BANS FIREWORKS SALES AHEAD OF BASTILLE DAY AS COUNTRY REELS FROM ANTI-POLICE RIOTS

The new military plan includes doubling the number of military reservists and reinforcing cyberdefense, as well as increasing weapons production capacity both to help Ukraine and to keep the French military adequately supplied.

French serviceman operate a mortar

French servicemen operate a mortar during a joint French-US exercise in Capu Midia, Romania, on Feb. 9, 2023. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda, File)

The new budget for the 2024-2030 period is more than a third higher than the last military spending plan of 295 billion euros for 2019-2025.

FUNDRAISER FOR FRENCH COP ACCUSED OF KILLING TEEN SURPASSES $1M AS VIOLENCE RAGES

The bill won final approval by the divided National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, on Wednesday by a vote of 244-37, and it was approved by the conservative-led Senate on Thursday by 313 votes to 17.

Macron’s centrist alliance doesn’t have a majority in either house of parliament, but military officers have long lamented shrinking armed forces spending, while conservative and far-right parties tend to support investment in defense.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Macron is scheduled to speak to defense officials later Thursday, on the eve of Bastille Day celebrations that include an elaborate Paris parade showcasing troops, warplanes and military equipment.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.