Sigmar Gabriel, whose Social Democratic Party is Chancellor Angela Merkel's junior coalition partner, said if Germany raises its defence spending from around 1.3 per cent of its gross domestic product today to meet NATO's target of 2 percent, it could cause angst elsewhere in Europe, given the country's militaristic past.
"This would be a defence supremacy, a military supremacy in Europe," he said during a visit to the Estonian capital of Tallinn. "I think our neighbours wouldn't like to see this in 10 to 15 years."
Merkel has said Germany is committed to the 2 per cent goal, but Gabriel has sought to make defense spending an election-year issue, and has suggested that German commitments to development aid and humanitarian moves, such as taking in nearly 900,000 asylum seekers in 2015, should be part of the calculation.
Estonia is one of a handful NATO members meeting the defense spending target, though the 2.2 per cent of GDP expenditure from the tiny nation equates to around 477 million euros, far less than the 35.1 billion euros (USD 38 billion) that Germany spent last year.
Germany is a lead nation in NATO's effort to reassure the Baltics, commanding a brigade that has recently been stationed in Lithuania. Britain commands a similar multi-national brigade in Estonia, while Canada has command of one in Latvia and the United States another in Poland.
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