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Great Britain, France, Germany and the United States have lifted restrictions on the types of weapons that can be supplied to Ukraine, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced on May 26. (video)

The move clears the way for the EU to send its most powerful and long-range missiles to Kyiv that can strike targets deep inside Russian territory, something the allies have been reluctant to do for fears of escalating tensions with the Kremlin and possibly provoking a direct clash between Russia and Nato countries in Europe.

"There are no longer any range restrictions on weapons supplied to Ukraine, not from the British, not from the French, not from us, not from the Americans either. This means that Ukraine can now also defend itself by attacking military positions in Russia, for example,” Merz said during an interview on German television. “It couldn’t do that until some time ago, and with very few exceptions, it didn’t do that until some time ago. Now it can. In jargon, we call this long-range fire, i.e., equipping Ukraine with weapons that attack military targets in the rear.”

The decision comes the day after Russia launched a devastating missile and drone barrage on Ukraine over the weekend of May 23-25 that largely targeted civilian targets in Kyiv and many other urban centres in Ukraine – amongst the largest attacks since the war started over three years ago.

The decision also clears the way for Germany to deliver its powerful Taurus cruise missiles that Kyiv had been asking for, but Berlin had so far been reluctant to supply. Merz didn’t mention the Taurus missiles by name during his interview, but has suggested that unlike former German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, he was not against supplying Kyiv with the missile, which can hit Russian targets deep in the rear or could destroy the Kerch bridge connecting Russia to the Crimean peninsula.

    • @thatKamGuy@sh.itjust.works
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      33 days ago

      Not quite, unfortunately… these cruise missiles don’t have the range to cover the distance to Moscow. Perhaps another exploratory excursion into the Kursk region might be necessary?

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      Dropping a $4M warhead on a $40k home, then complaining because you’ve run out of ammo again.

      And westerners wonder why their military leadership keeps losing wars.

          • @Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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            33 days ago

            You realize Russia asked their Hapsburgs to leave quite a while ago, right? During one of those big family fueds. They were quite insistent about it, too, even more so than the French.

            • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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              43 days ago

              Trying to ignore how the current United Russia movement has joined at the hip with the Italians, the Germans, the French, the Brits, and the Americans all begging to align around a new anti-Muslim Axis of Fascism is blindingly obtuse.

              Hell, the one thing it seems all of these countries agree on is how much they support Palestinian Genocide. What Russia has done to Ukraine is just another facet of the European desire to ethnically cleanse the rest of the planet.

        • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          33 days ago

          I think we’re way past the point of complaining. The entire region seems intent on industrialized murder-suicide thanks to decades of US warmongering. The only way out of this is via a sealed box car and a junior officers revolt.

      • @NewSocialWhoDis@lemm.ee
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        23 days ago

        Military budgets are placed based on the value of what they’re protecting (physical assets, economic activity, etc), not based on the wealth of the people who could destroy your assets/activities.

        • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          Military budgets are placed based on the value of what they’re protecting

          That’s not even remotely true. The military budget has no correlation with changes in GDP.

              • @NewSocialWhoDis@lemm.ee
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                13 days ago

                As someone in defense, Boeing sucks.

                Regardless, my point was just that spending targets were indeed pegged to GDP.

                • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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                  3 days ago

                  The EU is not growing its GDP at anywhere near 5% outside of Malta. Average across the bloc is 1.2%

                  During the boom years of the 90s, Europe (and the US) were cutting defense spending not raising them. It was only during big downturns that we saw them ratchet the military spending up again.

                  If MIC spending is anything, it is counter-cyclical.

                  • @NewSocialWhoDis@lemm.ee
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                    3 days ago

                    Growth of GDP is irrelevant. The article you linked doesn’t say that they are increasing spending targets by 5%. The article said they are increasing spending targets from 2% of GDP to 5% of GDP. They are increasing spending targets by 150%.

                    Look, defense spending isn’t a monotonic relationship with GDP. It’s a risk assessment taking into account the value of your assets and activities as well as the size of the threat faced. In the 90s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, there was basically no large threat to the international US-led order. The US still had to maintain a base level of funding to squash upstarts (pirates, …Iraq), but the safety of high value assets and activity could be insured with much less funding.

                    Your initial argument was that spending on defense ought to be on par with the value of the threat faced, which makes no sense. Spending on defense is insurance to protect what makes you money. You don’t price flood insurance for your home on the cost of that many gallons of water. You price it based on the value of your home and the likelihood of it flooding.