MADRID (Reuters) – Spain and Germany will discuss plans for a German-led, joint missile defence system at a summit in Spain on Wednesday, the German ambassador to Spain said in an interview with the Cadena SER radio station.
But the Spanish government denied that the topic was on the agenda.
“It is an issue that will certainly be discussed at the summit,” Ambassador Maria Margarete Gosse said late on Tuesday, adding that there had already been “low-level” talks between the two NATO members about Spain joining the initiative.
However, the Spanish government denied having received “any proposal or communication in this regard” in a statement released on Wednesday ahead of the meeting between Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
They are due to meet, along with senior ministers, in the northern Spanish city of La Coruna later on Wednesday.
The German embassy told Reuters that the topic would “definitely” be on the summit agenda although a German government spokesman told Reuters it was “not clear” if the topic would be touched on in the meeting.
Scholz first proposed establishing a joint missile defence system in August, in a speech in Prague, describing the proposal as “a security gain for the whole of Europe”.
In September, German Defence Minister Christine Lambrecht said in a Reuters interview that Berlin aimed to strike a deal with other NATO countries on the air defence system at a meeting in Brussels on Oct. 12-13.
Germany was still negotiating with possible partners for the project, with the Arrow 3 interceptor system built by Israel Aerospace Industries seen as a possible candidate, Lambrecht said.
Spain’s socialist-led government on Tuesday unveiled a draft budget after intense discussions with its far-left coalition partner, Unidas Podemos, which sought extended social spending in return for approving an increase in defence spending to meet NATO expectations.
(Reporting by David Latona; Editing by Aislinn Laing, Robert Birsel)