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More EU member debt needed to finance military – official

by Admin
January 30, 2026
in News, Politics, World
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More EU member debt needed to finance military – official
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Published: January 30, 2026 12:51 pm
Author: RT

The bloc’s budget is too small, and without extra funding poorer regions and farmers will pay the price, the social committee chief has warned

EU member states will need to take on more joint debt to fund expanding military spending, Seamus Boland, president of the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC), has warned, saying the bloc’s next seven-year budget is too small to cover the costs.

European NATO members last year agreed to raise defense spending targets toward 5% of GDP by 2035 and launched initiatives such as ReArm Europe to revamp their militaries. The push has been framed as a response to an alleged Russian threat – a claim Moscow has repeatedly dismissed as “nonsense.”

The European Commission earlier proposed a €2 trillion ($2.4 trillion) budget for 2028-2034, but Boland said it will fall short of financing the EU’s military ambitions.

“We are creating a new Europe, with much more emphasis on defense. We can’t do that out of the current expenditure,” he told Euractiv on Thursday, warning that when budgets are squeezed, “somebody’s going to suffer” – typically poorer and more remote regions that risk losing investment and support.

Read more

FILE PHOTO: A view of Leopard 2 tanks at a production line in Germany.
EU countries’ debt climbs amid military buildup – new data

Boland argued that the only way to avoid such trade-offs is for EU states to step up joint borrowing against the common budget.

“Massive change means you need the money now. That means you borrow it,” he said, without specifying the scale required.

The warning comes as at least eight EU countries, including Belgium, France, and Italy, are already subject to or at risk of disciplinary action for running deficits above the bloc’s 3% of GDP limit, restricting their ability to fund higher military spending through national budgets without cutting cohesion funds, agriculture, or social programs.

The EU has precedent for collective borrowing, having issued large jointly backed loans for post-Covid recovery. Last month, it also agreed to issue up to €90 billion in joint debt to support a loan for Ukraine after failing to agree on using frozen Russian assets. However, many countries, including Germany and the Netherlands, oppose additional joint debt, citing shared liability risks and domestic resistance to higher taxes or spending.


READ MORE: Switzerland plans tax hike to revamp military

Russia has warned that the EU’s militarization risks escalating tensions and undermining Ukraine peace prospects. Moscow has also condemned the bloc’s use of joint debt to finance Kiev, with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov accusing Brussels of “digging into the pockets of its own taxpayers” to prolong the conflict.

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Tags: Russia Today
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