President Trump announced at the NATO summit in Ankara on July 8 that the US would grant Ukraine a license to domestically produce Patriot surface-to-air missile interceptors. It’s the first time Washington has approved anything like this for Kyiv, and it fundamentally changes the calculus around defense manufacturing in Europe.
“We’re gonna give you a licence to make Patriots,” Trump told the summit. The statement caps months of lobbying by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who has pushed for the production license since May 2026 as Russian missile barrages continue to strain Ukraine’s limited interceptor stockpiles.
Why this matters beyond the battlefield
Patriot interceptors are manufactured by Raytheon, a subsidiary of RTX Corporation. Global production capacity for Patriot missiles currently sits somewhere between 60 and 700 units per month, depending on the variant and which allied nations are contributing to the pipeline.
Ukraine has relied heavily on US-supplied Patriot systems since late 2022. Every interceptor fired over Kyiv or Odesa is one fewer sitting in American or allied stockpiles. Licensing Ukraine to build its own interceptors would eventually allow Ukraine to replenish its own supply domestically rather than draining Western arsenals, though standing up missile production from scratch is not something that happens quickly.












