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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
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Germany names Russia its immediate threat

3 min read
16:48UTC

Germany published its first-ever standalone military strategy on 22 April, naming Russia the "biggest and most immediate threat" and setting a 2029 readiness deadline. Active Bundeswehr strength is planned to grow from 185,420 to 260,000.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

Berlin wrote a Russia-facing doctrine with a 2029 readiness deadline and a 260,000-active-troop ceiling.

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius published Germany's first-ever standalone military strategy on Wednesday 22 April, naming Russia the "biggest and most immediate threat" and setting a 2029 readiness deadline for large-scale conflict 1. Active Bundeswehr strength is planned to rise from 185,420 to 260,000 by the mid-2030s, with reserves growing from 60,000 to 200,000. Conscription remains a fallback if volunteer recruitment falls short. Pistorius has held the Defence portfolio since January 2023.

The strategy publication lands on the operational baseline set by the Germany-Ukraine €4 billion defence package signed in Berlin on 14 April . That agreement funded a Raytheon direct commercial sale for several hundred GEM-T Patriot interceptors, 36 IRIS-T launchers and €300 million for Ukrainian long-range strike, with a new production line in Schrobenhausen. Berlin had locked in procurement before Pistorius wrote the doctrine. What he published on 22 April is the doctrinal frame around a force-generation timeline the January 2026 constitutional debt-brake removal had already funded.

Berlin's 22 April publication measures the NATO posture gap on a single-day comparison with Whitehall's Hormuz-facing planning at Northwood. Pistorius has named Russia, set a deadline and committed the Bundeswehr to fielding Europe's largest conventional army by 2039; the UK's War Book revival on the same Wednesday sits against a £28 billion procurement funding gap. Two allies, one day, and the difference between a doctrine document and a civil-mobilisation binder reopened on top of an underfunded force.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Germany, for the first time in its post-war history, published a dedicated military strategy document on 22 April that names Russia as its 'biggest and most immediate threat'. Previously German defence planning was embedded in NATO documents that avoided naming specific countries so directly. Defence Minister Boris Pistorius set a deadline of 2029 for the Bundeswehr (Germany's military) to be ready for large-scale conflict, and announced plans to grow it from roughly 185,000 to 260,000 active personnel and expand the reserves from 60,000 to 200,000. This is the most explicit German security posture shift since reunification in 1990.

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Defense News· 24 Apr 2026
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This Event
Germany names Russia its immediate threat
Berlin's first standalone military strategy sets a 2029 Bundeswehr readiness deadline for large-scale conflict and puts a doctrinal Russia-facing frame around a force expansion already funded.
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