The die is cast: the European Investment Bank (EIB) is going to have to become more involved in European rearmament. A group of 14 countries has sent a letter to the president of the EU’s large financial arm, Nadia Calviño, urging her to become more involved in financing the defense industry. European leaders ask the former Spanish vice president to expand the definition of dual use (civil and military), thus extending the list of activities susceptible to receiving credits from this entity, which is prohibited from financing exclusively military projects. The letter, signed by heads of Government and State, has the signature of leaders such as the German Chancellor, Olaf Scholz, the President of France, Emmanuel Macron, or the Italian Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni; Not so with that of the President of the Spanish Government, Pedro Sánchez.
At the meeting of finance ministers, Ecofin, which was held last February in Ghent, there was already consensus in demanding that Calviño, present at the meeting, prepare a report in two months on “the definition and scope of technologies dual-use,” as the former Spanish vice president herself explained to this newspaper. The investment and spending needs in Defense are enormous, as well as in the ecological and digital transition. Precisely in that appointment, the president of the ECB, Christine Lagarde, estimated the amount needed at an additional 75 billion a year, which is why the majority of capital, and also the European Commission, see the EIB as an essential tool.
In this context the letter arrives, in which the majority of Member States – at the same time shareholders of the entity, which far exceed 50% of the capital – try to mark the path of this task. “We need to explain the possibilities that the EIB would have to finance investment in defense-related activities beyond current dual-use projects. “This would mean debating and re-evaluating the current definitions of dual-use projects and the list of excluded activities, as well as reconsidering its defense industry lending policy and other restrictive elements,” the letter states.
The need for Europe to have a more powerful security and defense industry and to rearm has been open practically since the large-scale invasion of Ukraine that Vladimir Putin launched on February 24, 2022. However, in recent months the voices calling for it They claim they do so with much more insistence, supported by the possible return of Donald Trump to the White House, and the critical situation that Ukraine is experiencing in its defense once morest Russian aggression. This would lead the EU to consider the need to invest in a sector that until recently might be considered stigmatized in the public opinion for two reasons: the requirement to deliver ammunition and weapons to Kiev so that it does not lose the war and the obligation of the Member States to depend less on NATO (United States) to guarantee their security. Added to this situation are the continuous calls heard from the countries closest to Russia and from German espionage suggesting that Moscow would be in a position to attack one of the NATO countries in two years.
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