Germany Revives Effort to Buy US Tomahawks, FT Reports

May 10 (Reuters) – Germany is reviving ⁠efforts ⁠to buy Tomahawk ⁠cruise missiles from the U.S., the ​Financial Times reported on Sunday, citing people with ‌knowledge of Berlin’s strategy.

Berlin ‌hopes to persuade the Trump administration ⁠to agree ⁠to the sale of the Tomahawks together with ​their Typhon ground launchers, the newspaper said.

The White House, the U.S. Department of Defense and the ​German Ministry of Defence did not immediately respond to ⁠Reuters ⁠requests for comment.

Germany’s Minister ⁠of ​Defence Boris Pistorius is planning a trip to ​Washington, the report ⁠said, in a bid to revive Berlin’s proposal to purchase long-range systems, which was first submitted in July last year. The U.S. ⁠has yet to respond.

The visit, however, hinges upon whether ⁠Pistorius can secure a meeting with Pete Hegseth, his U.S. counterpart, unnamed sources told the FT.

The Tomahawk Land Attack Missile is a long-range cruise missile typically launched from sea to attack targets in deep-strike missions.

In February, the Pentagon said it had signed ⁠a seven-year deal with Raytheon to increase Tomahawk production as its stockpiles have been depleted by the war with Iran.

(Reporting by Ananya ​Palyekar in Bengaluru; Editing by William ​Mallard and Thomas Derpinghaus)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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