It’s interesting to see how in less than a year this map might suddenly become darker in color.
Ours is embarrassing.
Casual 900-1500 usd gap
Belarus?
Norway surprised me the most. Defending mountains is (relatively) easy and cheap, but i guess if you actually want to move your troops around it becomes very difficult and expensive. And since their armed forces are relatively small, mobility is far more important, aka expensive.
Doesn’t really make sense to compare 2021 numbers anymore. Things have changed too much. It’s only of historic interest.
Norway is about to reverse-weserübung Germany.
Norwegians are ready for a rodeo
Quisling-battalion stronk.
Dear Norwegians,
what the fuck?
step 1: have your own oil
Shouldn’t it also be /per GDP?
What kind of bullshit way to measure this is military spending per capita? % of GDP shows well enough the country’s commitment to their military without bringing in the population for whatever reason.
15 comments
[Source](https://milex.sipri.org/sipri)
Why not use euros?
It’s interesting to see how in less than a year this map might suddenly become darker in color.
Ours is embarrassing.
Casual 900-1500 usd gap
Belarus?
Norway surprised me the most. Defending mountains is (relatively) easy and cheap, but i guess if you actually want to move your troops around it becomes very difficult and expensive. And since their armed forces are relatively small, mobility is far more important, aka expensive.
Doesn’t really make sense to compare 2021 numbers anymore. Things have changed too much. It’s only of historic interest.
Norway is about to reverse-weserübung Germany.
Norwegians are ready for a rodeo
Quisling-battalion stronk.
Dear Norwegians,
what the fuck?
step 1: have your own oil
Shouldn’t it also be /per GDP?
What kind of bullshit way to measure this is military spending per capita? % of GDP shows well enough the country’s commitment to their military without bringing in the population for whatever reason.