How Boris Pistorius is transforming the German armed forces
The defence minister is turning the country’s promises into reality
Boris Pistorius might seem an unlikely candidate for Germany’s most popular politician. A ruddy-faced veteran of local politics in the flat north-western state of Lower Saxony, he can sound gruff and dismissive. His party, the Social Democrats, has suffered a steep drop in support since taking power at the head of a three-way coalition in 2021. And for a country that has enjoyed eight decades of peace, that shuns nuclear weapons and still shudders with shame for instigating two world wars, Mr Pistorius’s message to bite the bullet and get kriegstüchtig, “war-capable”—and to get there fast—might seem jarring.
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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Ploughshares into swords”
Europe February 24th 2024
- Vladimir Putin has been fighting not just Ukraine, but his own people
- After two years of war, Ukrainians are becoming pessimistic
- Towns in eastern Ukraine fear they will be Russia’s next target
- How Boris Pistorius is transforming the German armed forces
- Europe’s generosity to Ukrainian refugees is not so welcome—in Ukraine
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Five years after it was gutted by fire, the cathedral is more beautiful than ever
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