NATO summit ends with license for Ukraine to build Patriot missiles
The NATO summit in Ankara closed with Trump promising Zelensky a license for Ukraine to manufacture Patriot systems, plus 70 billion euros in support for 2026.
NATO’s 36th summit closed its doors in Ankara with a result Kyiv had chased for years. In his bilateral meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky, Donald Trump announced the United States will grant Ukraine a license to produce its own Patriot air defence systems — «make them yourself», as the US president put it.
What was decided at the NATO summit in Ankara?
Two things with real weight. First, the Patriot production license — the air defence system Zelensky has long begged for in bigger numbers. The interceptors are expensive, scarce and slow to build, and making them on Ukrainian soil changes the arithmetic of the country’s air defence. Second, the summit declaration, in which allies pledge 70 billion euros in military equipment, assistance and training for Ukraine in 2026.
Why does the Patriot license matter so much?
Because Russian attacks are not easing — and every available Patriot battery literally decides what gets intercepted and what lands. Depending on allied deliveries has been Ukraine’s Achilles heel; a production line of its own is the kind of structural commitment that outlives electoral cycles.
The closing mood contrasted with the tense opening, when the summit began with the 5% of GDP bill on the table. Erdogan declared the summit a success, Trump praised the alliance’s «unity», and the final declaration is up on NATO’s official site. Whether the promises survive each leader’s flight home — that is the next summit’s problem.
Image: DoD Photo By Glenn Fawcett / Wikimedia Commons (public domain)