Boris Pistorius, Minister of Defence of Germany. (Omar Havana/Getty Images)

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World military spending hits record as German minister urges Kyiv not to accept US peace plan

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World military expenditure reached $2.72 trillion (€2.38 trillion) in 2024, an increase of 9.4 per cent from 2023 and the steepest year-on-year rise since at least the end of the Cold War, according to a report released by a leading conflict think-tank.

Heightened geopolitical tension saw increased military spending in all world regions, with particularly rapid growth in both Europe and the Middle East, data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) showed on April 27.

“Over 100 countries around the world raised their military spending in 2024,” SIPRI said.

“As governments increasingly prioritise military security, often at the expense of other budget areas, the economic and social trade-offs could have significant effects on societies for years to come,” it said.

The war in Ukraine and doubts over US commitment to the NATO-alliance saw military spending in Europe including Russia rise by 17 per cent, pushing European military spending beyond the level recorded at the end of the Cold War.

The data was released the same day German defence minister Boris Pistorius said Ukraine should not agree to US President Donald Trump’s latest proposal that it cede swathes of territory in return for a ceasefire with Russia as it would be akin to a “capitulation”.

Kyiv obviously knew it might need to part with some territory to reach a sustainable ceasefire that was agreed in good faith, Pistorius told German public broadcaster ARD.

“But they will certainly not go as far – or should not go as far – as the latest proposal by the American president,” said Pistorius, who was likely to remain defence minister in the new German coalition government.

“Ukraine on its own could have got a year ago what was included in that [Trump] proposal, it is akin to a capitulation. I cannot discern any added value,” he added.

Russia’s military expenditure reached an estimated $149 billion (€130.6 billion) in 2024, a 38 per cent increase from 2023 and double the level in 2015. This represented 7.1 per cent of Russia’s GDP and 19 per cent of all government spending.

Ukraine’s total military expenditure grew by 2.9 per cent to reach $64.7 billion (€56.7 billion), which amounted to 43 per cent of Russia’s spending. At 34 per cent of GDP, Ukraine had the largest military burden of any country in 2024.

“Ukraine currently allocates all of its tax revenues to its military,” SIPRI said. “In such a tight fiscal space, it will be challenging for Ukraine to keep increasing its military spending.”

Military spending by the US rose by 5.7 per cent per cent to reach $997 billion (€874.1 billion)|, which was 66 per cent of total NATO spending and 37 per cent of world military spending in 2024.