LONDON (Reuters) - The European Union is considering making foreign policy decisions subject to majority votes, rather than requiring the unanimous agreement of all members states as at present, German defense minister Ursula von der Leyen said on Wednesday.

"We are thinking about perhaps moving towards a majority vote in diplomacy and foreign affairs so that we can respond rapidly to crises and speak with one voice, one European voice," von der Leyen said at a London School of Economics German Symposium event.

"And so you cannot be blocked by the one country who doesn't want you to utter anything in the direction (that) Europe wants to speak."

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Turning to Germany military spending which was sharply curtailed after the end of the Cold War but ramped up again after Russia's annexation of the Crimea region in 2014, Von der Leyen said it would take years to bring the armed forces up to standard.

"The whole modernization process will have to go on over years in Germany - and many, many other countries too. That is what we are debating."

A German defense ministry report earlier this week found that less than half of submarines, warplanes and some key weapons were ready for use. [nL8N1QH61Y]

Asked about German media reports on a cyber attack launched by Russian hacker group APT28, von der Leyen declined to comment. [nB4N1N902H]

The reports said the group, which had already attacked the German parliament in 2015, managed to steal data from the foreign and defense ministries in the latest hack.

Germany has confirmed it is investigating a cyber attack that affected government computer networks, but said the incident had been brought under control.

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