WW3 Risk WatchComparison

Comparison

Germany vs United States

Compare Germany and United States across land, sea, air, nuclear, cyber-space, asymmetry, and alliance depth.

VS
Europe

Germany

#15 · Rearming industrial power

Germany has no independent nuclear force, but its industrial base and NATO support-hub role matter for theater endurance.

WarheadsNone
Military spend$88.5B
Composite score48
Active181,000
Reserve34,000
Combat aircraft215
Major naval assets66
Strategic postureA force optimized for industry, sustainment, and alliance support.
Defense industryOne of Europe's largest industrial bases and logistics hubs.
Combat experienceLimited direct combat, but strong support and maintenance systems.
Industrial baseNATO hubAir-defense investmentLogistics support
North America

United States

#1 · Global tier one

The benchmark force: global bases, carrier strike groups, strategic lift, and extended deterrence in one package.

Warheads3,700 warheads
Military spend$997B
Composite score92
Active1,328,000
Reserve799,500
Combat aircraft2,800
Major naval assets296
Strategic postureExtended deterrence backed by a global reinforcement architecture.
Defense industryThe largest integrated ecosystem of defense industry, space capability, and intelligence infrastructure.
Combat experienceSustained expeditionary experience and mature multi-domain joint operations.
Carrier strike groupStrategic liftAlliance networkNuclear triad
Balance of power
Germany48Composite score
AdvantageUnited States44 point gap
United States92Composite score

United States leads on both average score and the number of stronger axes.

Winning axes0 : 7
Biggest gapNuclear
Germany score48

Average explanatory score across seven axes

United States score92

Average explanatory score across seven axes

Axis advantage0 : 7

How many axes each side leads

Largest gapNuclear

United States leads by 95 points

Land

Ability to deploy large ground formations with armor and long-range fires.

United States
Germany
56
United States
84
Sea

Blue-water operations, carrier and submarine employment, and sea-control capacity.

United States
Germany
41
United States
100
Air

Air superiority, long-range strike, airborne early warning, and airlift capacity.

United States
Germany
60
United States
98
Nuclear

Warhead scale, survivability, and diversity of delivery systems.

United States
Germany
0
United States
95
More axesHide axes
Cyber & space

Integration of satellites, ISR, electronic warfare, and cyber operations.

United States
Germany
67
United States
95
Asymmetry

Missile saturation, gray-zone activity, irregular warfare, and drone-cyber integration.

United States
Germany
28
United States
74
Alliance

Alliance depth, overseas basing, reinforcement potential, and long-duration support capacity.

United States
Germany
87
United States
100
Methodology

Warhead counts and military spending use public data, while active and reserve personnel, combat aircraft, major naval assets, defense industry, logistical endurance, and combat experience are used as supporting indicators. Land, sea, air, nuclear, cyber-space, asymmetric, and alliance scores are normalized explanatory metrics on a 100-point scale based on public operating range and force density.