Pentagon to 'rush' Patriot missiles to Ukraine

1 week ago 24

A launcher of a Patriot missile system of the Bundeswehr, the German armed forces, stands during the "National Guardian" military exercise at the Bundeswehr's tank training grounds on April 18, 2024 in Munster, GermanyImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

A Patriot missile system used by Germany

By Holly Honderich

in Washington

The Pentagon has said it will "rush" Patriot air defence missiles and artillery ammunition to Ukraine as part of a $6bn (£4.8bn) military aid.

Its the second package from Washington this week, following $1bn in more immediate aid announced on Wednesday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said earlier on Friday that Kyiv "urgently" needs Patriot missiles in the face of growing Russia air threats.

Mr Zelensky said Patriots were "what can and should save lives right now".

The US will "move immediately" to get the supplies to Ukraine, Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said on Friday.

However a list of the equipment in the package, supplied by the Defence Department, did not include additional Patriot launchers - something Mr Zelensky says his country desperately needs.

It is the largest security assistance package the US has committed to date, Mr Austin said, and includes air defence munitions, counter-drone systems, artillery ammunition an critical intercepts for Patriot air defence systems.

"It's not just Patriots that they need, they need other types of systems and interceptors as well," Mr Austin said. "I would caution us all in terms of making Patriot the silver bullet."

The announcement comes days after President Biden signed a long-awaited aid package containing $61bn in military support for Ukraine.

Ukraine only has a handful of Patriots to complement other Western missile defence systems and existing stocks of Soviet-era surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), such as the S-300.

They are the most capable and expensive air defence systems that Ukraine has. Each Patriot battery costs around $1bn (£800m), and each missile costs nearly $4m.

Germany has already promised an extra Patriot system - and its defence and foreign ministers appealed to their European counterparts earlier this month to respond urgently.

Greece has stocks of Patriots and S-300s but said none could be spared. We explained why we cannot do it," he told Skai TV.

His said his country's air defences were "critical systems for the protection of Greek air space".

According to reports, Spain will supply some Patriot missiles but not a full system.

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