France Plans 36 Billion Euro Boost to Rearmament, Nuclear Deterrent Expansion
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 8, 2026
3 min readLast updated: April 8, 2026
Add as preferred source on GooglePublished by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 8, 2026
3 min readLast updated: April 8, 2026
Add as preferred source on GoogleFrance will boost defence spending by €36 billion from now through 2030, raising annual outlays to about €76.3 billion in 2030 and expanding its nuclear arsenal, missile, drone and munitions capacity amid heightened security threats.
By John Irish
PARIS, April 8 (Reuters) - France plans to add a further 36 billion euros ($39 billion) to its defence spending between now and 2030 under an updated military planning law that expands its nuclear arsenal and boosts missile and drone stocks.
The increase, proposed despite one of the euro zone's biggest budget deficits, reflects mounting security pressures from wars in Ukraine and the Middle East and growing uncertainty over U.S. commitments to NATO under President Donald Trump.
The revised 2024–2030 law would lift defence spending to 2.5% of GDP by the end of the decade from about 2% now, with the annual budget reaching 76.3 billion euros in 2030, almost double its 2017 level.
"The deep and brutal shift in the balance of international geopolitics forces us to go harder and faster," Defence Minister Catherine Vautrin wrote in a summary of the bill issued on Wednesday. "France has acknowledged the global shift toward enduring and multidimensional conflict."
France complies with NATO's 2% target but the range of defence commitments it funds is broader than most, from a nuclear arsenal to an aircraft carrier. Meanwhile it is aiming to cut its budget deficit from around 5% of GDP to the European Union ceiling of 3% by 2029.
Central to the defence update is the strengthening of the nuclear deterrent, announced by President Emmanuel Macron in March when he also opened the door to allowing European partners to host French aircraft on nuclear deterrence missions.
The draft law proposes an increase in the number of nuclear warheads, whilst maintaining nuclear arms spending at about 13% of the overall defence budget.
France spends roughly 5.6 billion euros ($6.0 billion) a year to maintain its stockpile of 290 submarine- and air-launched weapons — the world's fourth-largest arsenal.
Russia's war in Ukraine has highlighted major gaps in NATO allies' arsenals, shortages that the conflict in the Middle East has compounded. The bill sharply increases investment in conventional capabilities.
An extra 8.5 billion euros will be earmarked for rebuilding stocks of artillery shells, air defence interceptors and long‑range missiles.
The draft also emphasises the importance of deep-strike capabilities, with studies launched for a new conventional ballistic missile with a range of up to 2,500 km (1,550 miles), alongside upgrades to cruise missiles.
Air and missile defences will see additional funding of 1.6 billion euros to accelerate delivery of SAMP/T NG systems, co-produced with Italy, and expand counter‑drone capabilities on land, at sea and around critical infrastructure.
Drone and robotic warfare will receive another 2 billion euros, including expanded naval and MALE (medium-altitude, long-endurance) capabilities, with a view to replacing U.S.-made Reaper drones by 2035, as well as robots that dive to the ocean floor.
Highlighting concerns over Europe's reliance on the United States for its security, France also plans to develop an early‑warning system capable of detecting missile launches.
That would include ground‑based radar and a planned European infrared detection satellite by 2035.
(Reporting by John Irish; editing by Richard Lough and Kevin Liffey)
France will add €36 billion to its defence spending by 2030 under the updated military planning law.
The law focuses on expanding France's nuclear deterrent, rebuilding missile and drone stocks, and boosting conventional military capabilities.
France plans to raise defence spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2030, up from about 2% currently.
France is prioritizing nuclear arsenal upgrades, new ballistic missiles, expanded drone and robotic warfare, and advanced air and missile defences.
The move is in response to heightened security risks from global conflicts and uncertainty over NATO and U.S. commitments.
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