Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic on Thursday commented on the procurement of Bradley US fighting vehicles, saying there had been dilemmas within the army's General Staff and the Defence Ministry, which was why he requested detailed reports from them.
Speaking to the press, Plenkovic said he had “initiated (a) detailed verification of what we can get, how much it costs, what the Croatian Army needs.”
He said the procurement was a detailed process that began in 2017 and thereby Croatia was reinforcing its defence cooperation with the United States as well as its own army and contribution to NATO. Croatia is also strengthening its economy since part of the job will go to the Djuro Djakovic company, he added.
Commenting on President Zoran Milanovic’s pressure to procure the Bradleys, the prime minister said, “Pressuring the government, which was the one to embark on this process, is a little ridiculous.”
Plenkovic said he initiated a verification process over the past six weeks and that the General Staff and the Defence Ministry were consolidating their stand.
He said more consultations would be held. “We’ll decide as we planned, but fully conscious that we have the key elements on the viability of that process.”
Plenkovic said that as he understood it, the stand of the General Staff and the Defence Ministry was to procure the A2 ODS version of the Bradleys. This version is on the table, but together with the weaponry and everything which makes the vehicles good and useful, he added.
Commenting on today’s record-high number of daily coronavirus cases in Croatia, Plenkovic said the fourth wave of the pandemic, dominated by the Delta variant, had merged with the wave in which Omicron is dominant. He said the number was as expected and reiterated that protection from the virus lay in vaccination and individual responsibility.
Asked if hospitality establishments would be required to close earlier, he said the national Covid-19 crisis management team had not yet considered that option.
Commenting on the opposition’s collecting signatures for a vote of no confidence in Construction Minister Darko Horvat, Plenkovic said it would not pass. “We will reject this (initiative) too. The parliamentary majority is strong.”