- by
- 01 30, 2025
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days after Russia unleashed its “special military operation” to grab Ukraine, Olaf Scholz, Germany’s freshly elected chancellor, proclaimed a moment of epochal change. The term he used in a speech to parliament on February 27th last year was , a “turning in time”. The last such shift, known to Germans simply as , was the movement of 1989-90 that reunited communist East Germany with the capitalist West.Listeners in Germany and abroad, notably those who have long pleaded for the ’s biggest and richest state to take its security more seriously, cheered. Not only did the dour Social Democrat, whose party has since the 1970s preached pacifying Russia, condemn its aggression and lend full support to Ukraine. Mr Scholz pledged an extra €100bn ($107bn)—double the annual defence budget—to boost Germany’s defence, as well as to push future military spending above the goal of 2% of that members have promised since 2006, but mostly failed to sustain. He also vowed to end dependence on Russian energy.