The United Kingdom has concluded plans to supply Ukraine with no fewer than 10,000 drones to aid its fight against Russia’s invasion, the government said Thursday as Defence Secretary Grant Shapps visited Kyiv.
The defence ministry explained that it was spending a further £125 million ($160 million) on “cutting-edge drones”, bringing its overall drone package to Ukraine to £325 million.
The money will deliver more than 10,000 drones for Ukraine’s armed forces throughout the year, a statement read.
Most will be first-person view drones, as well as one-way attack drones, surveillance and maritime drones.
“I am ramping up our commitment to arm Ukraine with cutting-edge new drones coming directly from the UK’s world-leading defence industries,” said Shapps, on his third visit to Ukraine, who met his Ukrainian counterpart Rustem Umerov and President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Britain says it has committed more than £7 billion of military support to Ukraine since Russia invaded its neighbour in February 2022. It has also trained tens of thousands of Ukrainian troops.
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It was the first country to provide longer-range weapons to the Ukrainian military, announcing last May that it would send air-launched Storm Shadow missiles.
The defence ministry said that Ukrainian troops have used different types of drones in the conflict, “destroying and damaging thousands of pieces of Russian equipment and vehicles”.
Africa Today News, New York reports that Kyiv, facing a shortage of manpower and weapons, is currently on the back foot in the conflict with Russia having made recent front-line battlefield gains.
Recall that the secretary-general in NATO has confirmed that there are currently no plans to send troops to Ukraine, even as Russia continues to maintain that it was ready to enter a direct conflict with the Western military alliance should it put boots on the ground.
In his response to the remarks made by French President Emmanuel Macron the previous day, Jens Stoltenberg on Wednesday vehemetly denied that NATO countries were considering the possibility of sending troops to Ukraine amid the Russian invasion.
There are “no plans for NATO combat troops on the ground in Ukraine”, the NATO chief said.