Military | Europe
The Czech Republic's Quiet Defense Revolution Nobody Is Writing About
The Czech Republic has become one of Europe's most important defence manufacturing hubs in the past two years. Here is how a country that barely registered in NATO defence discussions has transformed itself.
The Czech Republic has become one of Europe's most important defence manufacturing hubs in the past two years. Here is how a country that barely registered in NATO defence discussions has transformed itself.
- The Czech Republic has become one of Europe's most important defence manufacturing hubs in the past two years.
- The Czech Republic does not generate the kind of defence spending headlines that Poland's 4-percent-of-GDP figure does, or the dramatic political announcements that accompany Germany's Zeitenwende.
- Since February 2022, that picture has changed in ways that the larger defence story has somewhat overlooked.
The Czech Republic has become one of Europe's most important defence manufacturing hubs in the past two years.
The Czech Republic does not generate the kind of defence spending headlines that Poland's 4-percent-of-GDP figure does, or the dramatic political announcements that accompany Germany's Zeitenwende. It is a middle-sized Central European economy with a long industrial manufacturing tradition and a defence industry that, before 2022, was most associated with its export of light arms, training aircraft, and vehicles to markets that the major Western defence industries did not prioritize.
Since February 2022, that picture has changed in ways that the larger defence story has somewhat overlooked. The Czech Republic has become one of the most important sources of ammunition supply for Ukraine — particularly 152mm Soviet-caliber artillery shells that can be used with Ukrainian legacy systems. Czech industrial networks have been running at expanded capacity for the Ukraine supply mission, and the country has developed procurement expertise in the sourcing of Soviet-caliber ammunition from global markets that has been operationally critical for Ukraine's artillery sustainability.
Beyond the Ukraine supply mission, the Czech Republic has been investing in its own force modernization at a pace that has its defence spending approaching the NATO two-percent threshold for the first time since its post-Cold War demilitarization period. F-35A fighters to replace its Soviet-era aircraft, new infantry fighting vehicles, investment in electronic warfare and cyber capabilities — the portfolio covers the full spectrum of modern combined arms capability.
For NATO planners, the Czech Republic's transformation matters because it represents the East-Central European manufacturing base coming online for Western-standard military equipment at exactly the moment when NATO needs that manufacturing base most. The country's position between Germany and Ukraine, its deep integration into German automotive and industrial supply chains, and its own defence manufacturing heritage give it specific advantages that neither Poland nor the Baltic states possess in exactly the same combination.