Macron calls for ‘ruthless’ government response after teacher killed

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Updated 16 October 2023
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Macron calls for ‘ruthless’ government response after teacher killed

  • Macron called on police to comb through their files of radicals who could be deported from France to make sure no one was overlooked

Paris: France’s president on Monday called for a “ruthless” government response to those with terrorist ideologies, days after a teacher was stabbed to death in what he has called an act of “Islamist terror.”
Emmanuel Macron wants his ministers “to embody a ruthless state toward all those who harbor hate and terrorist ideologies,” a senior aide told reporters. He has called on police to comb through their files of radicals who could be deported from France to make sure no one was overlooked and has told the interior minister to take a “special approach to young men between the ages of 16-25 from the Caucasus,” the aide said.


Army chief says Switzerland can’t defend itself from full-scale attack

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Army chief says Switzerland can’t defend itself from full-scale attack

ZURICH: Switzerland cannot defend itself against a full-scale attack and must boost military spending given rising risks from Russia, the head of ​its armed forces said.
The country is prepared for attacks by “non-state actors” on critical infrastructure and for cyberattacks, but its military still faces major equipment gaps, Thomas Suessli told the NZZ newspaper.
“What we cannot do is defend against threats from a distance or even a full-scale ‌attack on ‌our country,” said Suessli, who is ‌stepping ⁠down ​at ‌the end of the year.
“It’s burdensome to know that in a real emergency, only a third of all soldiers would be fully equipped,” he said in an interview published on Saturday.
Switzerland is increasing defense spending, modernizing artillery and ground systems ⁠and replacing aging fighter jets with Lockheed Martin F-35As.
But the ‌plan faces cost overruns, while ‍critics question spending on artillery ‍and munitions amid tight federal finances.
Suessli said ‍attitudes toward the military had not shifted despite the war in Ukraine and Russian efforts to destabilize Europe.
He blamed Switzerland’s distance from the conflict, its lack of ​recent war experience and the false belief that neutrality offered protection.
“But that’s historically ⁠inaccurate. There are several neutral countries that were unarmed and were drawn into war. Neutrality only has value if it can be defended with weapons,” he said.
Switzerland has pledged to gradually raise defense spending to about 1 percent of GDP by around 2032, up from roughly 0.7 percent now – far below the 5 percent level agreed by NATO countries.
At that pace, the Swiss military would only be ‌fully ready by around 2050.
“That is too long given the threat,” Suessli said.