The European Perspective
NATO’s Drone Deficit
German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius delivered a stark warning at the Warsaw Security Forum, admitting NATO allies are “all lagging behind” in the critical area of drone defense (ZDF). This admission comes as Russian airspace violations and provocations intensify along the alliance’s eastern flank. The statement highlights a dangerous capabilities gap, where slow-moving, state-led procurement struggles to counter the rapid deployment of cheap, asymmetric threats. This isn’t just a budgetary issue; it’s a structural failure of innovation that questions the West’s agility. The immediate ripple effect will be renewed pressure on member states to fast-track investment in counter-UAV systems, likely through more nimble private-sector partnerships.
Europe’s Sanctions Paradox
A Greenpeace report reveals a glaring contradiction in the EU’s Russia policy: between 2022 and June 2025, key members France, Belgium, and Spain paid Moscow €34.3 billion for liquefied natural gas (LNG), significantly more than their combined €21.2 billion in aid to Ukraine (EUObserver). These energy payments, which remain unsanctioned, essentially subsidize both sides of the conflict. The data proves that political declarations are being undermined by entrenched energy dependencies, allowing the Kremlin to weaponize trade and finance its war effort directly from European coffers. This exposes the sanctions regime as porous and politically compromised.
Spain’s Fiscal Reprieve
In a rare positive fiscal development, Spain’s Treasury is cutting its net debt issuance target for 2025 by €5 billion, from a planned €60 billion to €55 billion (El Pais). This adjustment is a direct result of better-than-anticipated tax collection, reflecting a resilient economy rather than disciplined spending cuts. While any reduction in state borrowing is a welcome signal to markets, it underscores how inflation can temporarily boost government revenues, masking underlying structural deficits. The move provides Madrid with more fiscal leeway but sidesteps the harder work of genuine public-sector reform.
Catch the next Gist for the continent’s moving pieces.
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