Italy’s
grand plan to meet NATO target: A €13.5B bridge to Sicily
Meloni’s
deputy prime ministers are keen to class the bridge as a NATO-related project.
But does it really mesh with Europe’s military goals?
June 30,
2025 4:17 am CET
By Tommaso
Lecca, Ben Munster and Martina Sapio
Faced with a
daunting new NATO spending target, Italian politicians are proposing that a
long-discussed €13.5 billion bridge to Sicily should be defined as military
expenditure.
Rome is one
of NATO's lowest military spenders — only targeting 1.49 percent of gross
domestic product on its military last year. That makes the new goal of 5
percent by 2035 seem out of reach.
And that's
where the bridge could help.
The
government of Giorgia Meloni is keen to advance with the pharaonic scheme to
span the Strait of Messina with what would be world's longest suspension bridge
— a project that has been the dream of the Romans, dictator Benito Mussolini
and former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.
Both Foreign
Minister Antonio Tajani and Infrastructure Minister Matteo Salvini, Meloni's
deputy prime ministers, are playing up the notion that the bridge has a
strategic value to NATO rather than a purely economic role — a point that was
also stressed in a government report in April.
A government
official stressed no formal decision had been made on the classification of the
bridge as a security project, but said further talks would likely be held soon
to “see how feasible this feels.” The idea could be politically useful for
Meloni as she struggles to convince a war-wary public of the need for major
defense outlays at a time when Italy is already inching toward austerity.
There are
some clear grounds on which Italy might be able to build a case for the bridge.
Of the 5 percent of GDP NATO target, only 3.5 percent needs to be core defense
spending, while 1.5 percent can be steered to broader strategic resilience such
as infrastructure.
An Italian
Treasury official also suggested that branding the bridge as a military project
would help the government overcome some of the economic and technical barriers
that have stopped it being built in the past.
For decades,
efforts to build the bridge — with a estimated central span of 3.3 kilometers —
have repeatedly run into problems of costs, the difficulties of operating in a
seismic zone and the challenge of displacing people.
The new
designation would “override bureaucratic obstacles, litigation with local
authorities that could challenge the government in court claiming that the
bridge will damage disproportionately their land,” the Treasury official said.
It would also “facilitate raising money, especially in the next year, for the
bridge.”
Imperative
or ridiculous?
In April,
the Italian government adopted a document declaring the bridge should be built
for “imperative reasons of overriding public interest.”
In addition
to its civilian use, “the bridge over the Strait of Messina also has strategic
importance for national and international security, so much so that it will
play a key role in defense and security, facilitating the movement of Italian
armed forces and NATO allies,” the document added.
Italy also
requested that the project should be included in the EU’s financing plan for
the mobility of military personnel, materiel and assets, as it “would fit
perfectly into this strategy, providing key infrastructure for the transfer of
NATO forces from Northern Europe to the Mediterranean,” the government report
said.
The bridge
“represents an advantage for military mobility, enabling the rapid transport of
heavy vehicles, troops, and resources both by road and rail,” the government
added.
Whether NATO
— and more importantly U.S. President Donald Trump, who loves a big building
project — will buy into that logic is another matter.
Officially,
the Strait of Messina lies outside Italy’s only designated NATO military
mobility corridor — which begins at ports in the Puglia region on the heel of
the Italian boot, crosses the Adriatic to Albania, and continues on to North
Macedonia and Bulgaria. It is also unclear whether the strait features in the
EU’s own military mobility network, whose corridors, according to people
familiar with the discussions, are expected to align with NATO’s routes.
The
Americans aren't showing their hand for now. When asked about the bridge at the
NATO summit in The Hague in late June, U.S. aides chuckled, but offered no
immediate response.
Berlusconi
bridge
Foreign
Minister Tajani is a vocal advocate of the bridge. “We will make Italians
understand that security is a broader concept than just tanks,” he said in a
recent interview with business daily Milano Finanza.
“To achieve
this, we will focus on infrastructure that also has civilian uses, such as the
bridge over the Strait [of Messina], which falls within the concept of defense
given that Sicily is a NATO platform,” he added.
Infrastructure
Minister Salvini, Meloni's other deputy, sees the bridge as something that
could transform his far-right League party — originally the secessionist
Northern League — into a successful nationwide political movement that also
commits to a big project in the south.
“Of course,”
he recently responded when asked by a reporter whether the bridge could help
Italy reach its new NATO goal.“Infrastructure is also strategic from a security
perspective in many ways, so if we invest more in security, some strategic
infrastructure will also become part of this security plan.”
Salvini has
been pressing for the process to speed up, according to the Treasury official
and a lawmaker familiar with internal government dynamics.
"Matteo
is pushing a lot to obtain some form of 'approval' of the project at technical
and political level in order to show to the public opinion that something is
moving," the Treasury official said.
Opposition
parties disagree with both the need to build the bridge and its classification
as military spending.
“This is a
mockery of the citizens and of the commitments made at NATO. I doubt that this
bluff by the government will be accepted,” said Giuseppe Antoci, a member of
the European Parliament from the left-populist 5Star Movement.
“The
government should stop and avoid making an international fool of itself, which
would cover Italy in ridicule,” he added.
Another
argument against the project is that it would connect two of Italy's poorest
regions, neither of which has an efficient transport system. Many believe that
investing in local streets and railways is more urgent.
“The
population of Sicily and Calabria suffers from inadequate water infrastructure,
snail-paced transport, potholed roads, and third-world hospitals. The bridge
over the strait, therefore, cannot be a priority,” Antoci said.
But the
governing coalition is determined to move forward. On Tuesday, Salvini said the
project's final authorization is expected in July.
In a
somewhat inauspicious sign, Tajani has proposed naming the bridge after
Berlusconi, a prime minister famed for his bunga bunga parties and interminable
legal battles.
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