American consent for the licensed production of Patriot missiles could become one of the most important decisions for Ukraine’s defense independence. However, between the political promise and the first missile rolling off the Ukrainian production line lie years of negotiations, technology transfer, factory construction, and the creation of a secure supply chain.
U.S. President Donald Trump, during a meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky at the NATO summit in Ankara, announced his readiness to grant Ukraine a license to produce ammunition for Patriot anti-aircraft missile systems.
For Ukraine, this statement has enormous strategic significance.
Patriot remains one of the few Western systems capable of effectively countering Russian ballistic missiles, including the Iskander-M, as well as aeroballistic missiles like the Kinzhal. This is why the shortage of interceptors has turned into not just a military problem but a matter of survival for Ukrainian cities.
But the German publication WELT points out the main drawback of the American proposal: a license does not mean that Ukraine will be able to start mass production of missiles in a few months.
According to experts, creating a full-fledged production line could take several years. In the initial stage, Ukraine will still have to rely on ready-made missiles stored in the U.S. and European allies’ warehouses.
What exactly did Trump promise
The meeting between Volodymyr Zelensky and Donald Trump took place in Ankara on July 8, 2026.
The Office of the President of Ukraine reported that the parties discussed strengthening Ukraine’s air defense, further military support, and decisions that could enhance Ukraine’s positions.
As early as July 6, Volodymyr Zelensky publicly stated that Ukraine is ready to produce Patriot missiles independently if the U.S. provides the necessary licenses. According to him, Ukrainian enterprises are capable of creating volumes sufficient not only for Ukraine’s defense but also to assist other partners.
However, Trump’s statement remains a political promise rather than a ready industrial contract.
The American president acknowledged that the issue has not yet been agreed upon with the companies involved in the production of various types of missiles for Patriot, primarily Lockheed Martin and RTX, which includes Raytheon.
This is fundamentally important.
The U.S. government can authorize the transfer of technology and export of the license, but the organization of production, transfer of documentation, certification of parts, and quality control must be carried out by the manufacturing companies.
Without their participation, the political decision will not turn into a working production line.
Patriot is not just one missile
When politicians talk about ‘Patriot missiles,’ it may create the impression that it is a single standard munition.
In reality, the system can employ several types of interceptors with different tasks.
PAC-2 GEM-T, produced by Raytheon, is primarily intended for destroying aircraft, cruise missiles, and some tactical ballistic threats.
PAC-3 MSE, manufactured by Lockheed Martin, is a more modern and significantly more complex interceptor. It is primarily used against ballistic missiles and destroys the target through direct kinetic impact.
For Ukraine, the PAC-3 MSE is of particular importance, as the Russian army regularly uses ballistic missiles, against which the capabilities of most other air defense systems are limited.
Washington has not yet specified which interceptor license Ukraine might receive.
This issue could completely change the significance of the future agreement.
Production of PAC-2 GEM-T would allow Ukraine to increase its stockpile of missiles to combat cruise missiles and other aerial targets. Obtaining PAC-3 MSE technology would represent a qualitatively different level of cooperation — the transfer of one of the most sensitive American missile defense technologies.
Why the plant cannot be launched in a few months
Ukraine has proven capable of extremely quickly developing and scaling the production of drones, long-range missiles, and other weapons.
However, Patriot belongs to a different category of weapons.
It’s not about simply assembling a missile from several imported blocks.
To start production, it will be necessary to:
- conclude a licensing agreement;
- determine the list of technologies allowed for transfer;
- create a certified enterprise;
- install specialized American equipment;
- train personnel;
- organize the production or import of components;
- create a quality control system;
- ensure the physical protection of the enterprise;
- conduct tests and certification of finished missiles.
An interceptor missile must detect, calculate the trajectory, and destroy another missile in the air at tremendous speed. An error in software, electronics, engine, or guidance system could mean not just the loss of an expensive munition but the destruction of the city it was supposed to protect.
Therefore, production processes in this industry are strictly controlled, and each component undergoes multi-stage verification.
German missile analyst Markus Schiller emphasized in a comment to WELT that creating such production is significantly more complex than it might seem after political statements.
Even countries with developed industries and decades of cooperation with the U.S. have launched licensed lines over the years.
Experience of Japan and Germany
Japan is cited as one example.
The country has a powerful high-tech industry, a close military-political alliance with the U.S., and extensive experience in licensed production of American weapons. However, deploying Patriot missile production there took about five years.
Germany also could not instantly launch a new European line.
Back in 2024, Germany, the Netherlands, Romania, and Spain agreed to purchase up to 1,000 GEM-T missiles. For their production, a joint company COMLOG, owned by Raytheon and MBDA Deutschland, is being established.
Production at the German site is expected to begin at the end of 2026, but serial deliveries are expected later. Previously, the main delivery period was named as 2027–2033.
Even in Germany, the plant is being built on NATO territory, far from the immediate combat zone.
The Ukrainian enterprise will have to be created under the constant threat of Russian missile and drone attacks.
Russia will try to destroy the production
The location of the Patriot plant will become one of Ukraine’s most closely guarded state secrets.
Russia is likely to use satellite reconnaissance, espionage, cyberattacks, and airstrikes to detect and destroy the enterprise even before the start of serial production.
Therefore, the most realistic option may be not one large plant but a distributed production model.
Separate components may be produced at several enterprises in different regions of Ukraine or beyond its borders. Final assembly may also be divided among several sites.
Another option is the creation of a Ukrainian-American production in one of the NATO countries with subsequent transfer of finished missiles to Ukraine.
This model is already used in the Ukrainian defense industry. Some types of Ukrainian weapons are produced jointly with European partners at enterprises protected by NATO territory.
However, in this case, Ukraine will not receive a fully independent production chain on its territory.
Global shortage of Patriot
The main problem is not only the absence of a Ukrainian plant.
There is a physical shortage of Patriot missiles for everyone.
Demand sharply increased after the start of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, the escalation of threats in the Middle East, and the massive use of ballistic missiles by Iran and its allies.
In 2025, Lockheed Martin delivered over 600 PAC-3 MSE missiles. This was a record figure and approximately 20% higher than the previous year’s production.
In January 2026, the Pentagon and Lockheed Martin agreed on a long-term program to increase annual production capacity from approximately 600 to 2,000 missiles.
But achieving this figure will take several years. The company must build new lines, expand its supplier network, and increase production of engines, electronics, and other critical components.
Even with a threefold increase in production, the U.S. will have to distribute missiles between its own army and numerous allies.
Patriot is used by Germany, Poland, Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Israel, and other countries.
At the same time, the decision on who and when will receive the produced missiles is made by the American government, not Lockheed Martin itself.
In June 2026, the company acknowledged that it could not guarantee allies specific delivery times for PAC-3 MSE due to the global shortage and Washington’s decisions on distribution priorities.
Why Ukraine needs missiles now
Creating its own production can solve the strategic problem in a few years.
But Russian missiles are flying over Ukrainian cities today.
Therefore, a license cannot replace immediate deliveries of ready interceptors.
Until the Ukrainian line is launched, Kyiv will have to continue seeking the transfer of missiles from U.S. and European warehouses, as well as asking allies to temporarily give up their places in the production queue for Ukraine.
This is where the main political question arises.
Western states recognize that Ukraine is defending not only itself but the entire European security system. However, many governments simultaneously fear reducing their own missile defense stocks.
After new wars and crises in the Middle East, this competition has become even tougher.
NAnews — Israel News notes that the shortage of interceptors affects not only Ukraine.
Israel’s experience shows how quickly air and missile defense missiles can be expended during massive combined attacks.
Even a high-tech air defense system depends not only on radars and launchers but also on a constant flow of expensive munitions.
Therefore, the Ukrainian idea of producing Patriot is part of a broader process: Western states are beginning to realize that existing factories and pre-war production volumes do not match the reality of modern missile wars.
What Ukraine can get in the first stage
Most likely, cooperation will develop gradually.
First, a center for the repair and maintenance of Patriot missiles may appear in Ukraine or one of the neighboring countries.
The U.S. is already discussing the creation of a European PAC-3 service center with Germany, Poland, the Netherlands, and Sweden. Such a site should reduce the time needed to send missiles for repair to the United States.
The next step could be the production of individual components.
Ukrainian enterprises are capable of producing casings, mechanical parts, ground equipment elements, and some electronic systems under the control of the American manufacturer.
Then local assembly of missiles from kits produced in the U.S. and Europe is possible.
And only after that can deep localization begin, including the manufacture of key elements directly by Ukrainian enterprises.
This sequence looks slower than loud political promises, but this is how complex defense productions are usually created.
Why the license is still a breakthrough
Long terms do not mean that the decision is insignificant.
Until now, Ukraine was almost entirely dependent on the political will of partners. Each batch of missiles required separate negotiations, funding, and decisions by American authorities.
Own or joint production will gradually change this model.
Ukraine will be able to plan stocks for years ahead, train specialists, repair missiles closer to their place of use, and integrate into the Western defense industry not only as a recipient of aid but also as a manufacturer.
Moreover, Ukrainian enterprises have unique experience in operating air defense systems in conditions of constant war.
No NATO country faces such a number of combined attacks with ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and drones.
This experience can be used to upgrade missiles, improve software, and create new air defense systems.
Volodymyr Zelensky claims that Ukrainian enterprises, after receiving licenses, are capable of meeting not only their own needs but also helping partners.
Today, this statement looks ambitious. But the Ukrainian industry has already shown how quickly it can transition from small experimental batches of drones to mass production of millions of devices.
A solution for the future does not cancel responsibility today
An American license could become the foundation of Ukrainian missile defense in the next decade.
However, it will not protect Kyiv, Kharkiv, Dnipro, or Odesa tonight.
Between the promise and the first serial missile, there remains a dangerous time gap.
This can only be filled by transferring existing interceptors to Ukraine, increasing production in the US and Europe, joint purchases by allies, and creating a transparent system of priorities.
Ukraine has the necessary enterprises, engineers, and military experience.
The United States controls the technologies.
Europe has the funding and territories where part of the production can be more safely located.
Combining these capabilities can transform Ukraine from a dependent recipient of missiles into one of the centers of European missile defense.
But for this, Donald Trump’s political statement must turn into signed contracts, a specific list of transferred technologies, funding, and an approved construction schedule.
NAnews — News of Israel emphasizes: the Patriot license is not a ready-made missile and not an immediately closed Ukrainian sky.
It is a chance to build a system where, in a few years, the security of Ukrainian cities will depend not on the next political decision across the ocean, but on a constantly operating production line.
That is why Ukraine simultaneously needs two solutions: ready-made missiles — today and its own production — for the future.