State Secretary Markus Mäder discusses evolving European security situation and potential implications for Swiss defense spending.

"Pressure will increase on Switzerland to invest more in its defence."
"The F-35 will be the most widely used aircraft in Europe in a few yearsâ time."
While the European continent mobilizes with unprecedented urgency, Switzerland stands at a critical crossroads. In a staggering move that signals a tectonic shift in global security, the European Union decided this March to inject an additional âŹ800 billion (CHF 745 billion) into defense capabilities. This colossal figure casts a harsh spotlight on Bern's current trajectory. Markus Mäder, the newly appointed State Secretary for Security Policy, is not mincing words: the era of complacency is over.
The security landscape in Europe is hardening at a terrifying pace. Eastern European nations are taking drastic measures, with Latvia exiting the international mine ban treaty to potentially fortify its border with Russia. While the Baltic states prepare for the worst, Switzerland remains an island of slow deliberation in a sea of rapid militarization. Mäder warns that this disparity is unsustainable. As neighbors fortify their defenses against a volatile Russia, the expectation for Switzerland to pull its weight is no longer a polite requestâit is becoming a geopolitical demand. The question is no longer if Switzerland will be pressured to act, but how long it can withstand the heat before forced to open the national coffers.
German politicians are calling Swiss defense spending "a joke," and the numbers suggest they might have a point. Currently, Bern aims to reach a defense spending target of just 1% of GDPâbut not until 2032. In a world where security threats evolve by the hour, a seven-year timeline to reach a modest baseline appears dangerously lethargic. State Secretary Mäder candidly predicts that this sluggish pace will invite intense scrutiny and mounting pressure from European partners who are already making sacrifices.
"Europe is preoccupied with itself," Mäder observes, noting that while neighbors scramble to rearm, they are taking notes on who is contributing to the collective shield and who is free-riding. The contrast is stark: while the EU mobilizes hundreds of billions immediately, Switzerland's incremental approach risks isolating it politically. The criticism from Berlin is a harbinger of a broader diplomatic freeze if Switzerland fails to accelerate its financial commitment. The 1% target, once seen as a ceiling, is rapidly becoming a floor that Switzerland is struggling to even reach, leaving the nation vulnerable to both military inadequacy and diplomatic scorn.
The procurement of the F-35 fighter jet has ignited a fierce domestic firestorm, with the Social Democrats demanding the purchase be annulled following Donald Trumpâs political resurgence in the US. However, Mäder is pushing back with absolute conviction, framing the jet not just as a weapon, but as the "backbone of European air defense." To cancel the deal now would be a strategic catastrophe, severing Switzerland from the continent's primary defense architecture.
Mäder argues that the F-35 is the ultimate platform for synergy. With Germany and numerous other European nations adopting the stealth fighter, it is destined to become the most widely used aircraft in the European theater within a few years. "As a platform for cooperation, the F-35 will offer the greatest potential," Mäder asserts. Isolating Switzerland by rejecting the standard-issue hardware of its neighbors would destroy interoperability. The State Secretary's message is clear: in modern aerial warfare, you cannot fly alone. The F-35 is the ticket to the table, and abandoning it would leave the Swiss Air Force technologically orphaned in a dangerous sky.
Neutrality is no longer synonymous with solitude. Mäder is spearheading a paradigm shift, arguing that to remain neutral, Switzerland must paradoxically deepen its cooperation with NATO and the EU. "We have to prepare ourselves so that our policy has the option of working with partners," he explains. This is not about joining an alliance, but about ensuring survival. If an armed conflict spills over, the Swiss military must be capable of plugging into the broader European defense grid instantly.
This summer, Mäder will unveil a new security policy strategy that promises to redefine the boundaries of Swiss defense. This document, set for Federal Council adoption by year's end, will likely codify a more aggressive stance on interoperability. The days of the "hedgehog" strategyâcurling up and waiting for the storm to passâare over. The State Secretary is steering the country toward a pragmatic realism where defense competence is built on shared standards and joint training. As the continent rearms, Switzerland faces a definitive choice: integrate its defense mechanisms or face the next crisis blind and alone.