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6 Aug, 2025 14:58

NATO member approves ‘military investment’ for land-bridge project

Italy intends to write off the multibillion cost of the proposed Sicily-mainland link as part of its contribution to the bloc
NATO member approves ‘military investment’ for land-bridge project

Italy has approved a long-debated project to build a bridge linking the island of Sicily with the mainland, which the government claims is part of its spending commitment to NATO.

On Wednesday, an Italian government committee overseeing strategic investments gave the green light to allocate €13.5 billion ($15.5 billion) to construct a bridge. The planned structure will span nearly 3.7 kilometers and feature four traffic lanes and two railway tracks.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government revived the proposal in 2023, classifying it as a defense-related asset eligible to count toward NATO’s spending threshold. Members of the US-led bloc agreed that certain infrastructure investments could account for up to 1.5 percentage points of the bloc’s spending target of 5% of GDP.

Rome argues the bridge will serve as “fundamental infrastructure with respect to military mobility,” given its proximity to NATO bases in southern Italy. The country’s transport minister, Matteo Salvini, has touted the project’s potential to accelerate regional economic growth.

The EU has backed NATO’s plans by supporting the militarization of member states, claiming the program is necessary to counter a supposed Russian threat to its members, a claim that Moscow rejects. Russian officials insist that such rhetoric is aimed at deflecting public attention from economic hardship in Western countries.

Italy historically fell short of NATO’s previous 2%-of-GDP target for defense spending and is only expected to reach that mark this year. Meloni said in June that reaching the new 5% threshold would take up to a decade and called for revised EU fiscal rules to facilitate the country’s military buildup.

The idea of building a bridge over the Strait of Messina dates back to at least the 1960s and has repeatedly stalled due to a variety of concerns, including seismic risks, environmental impact, and potential mafia infiltration.

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