logo
Ukraine to boost domestic arms production to counter Russia's invasion

Ukraine to boost domestic arms production to counter Russia's invasion

Daily Mail​17-07-2025
A newly approved Ukrainian government is set to rapidly expand the country's domestic arms production to meet half of its weaponry needs within six months as it strives to counter Russia's invasion, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated on Thursday. In parallel, Switzerland announced that the U.S. Defense Department had notified it that Washington is redirecting a Swiss order for Patriot air defense systems to assist Ukraine, which urgently needs to bolster its defense against intensifying Russian aerial strikes.
The Swiss Defense Ministry, which had placed an order for five Patriot systems in 2022, confirmed on Thursday that the U.S. Defense Department informed it that it will 'reprioritize the delivery of Patriot systems to support Ukraine.' It remains unclear whether the Swiss-ordered Patriots will be sent directly to Ukraine or if they will replace systems in other European countries that could be donated to Kyiv.
The delivery of the systems, worth billions of dollars, had been scheduled to start in 2027 and conclude in 2028, but the Swiss government revealed that Washington informed it of the delay on Wednesday. The number of systems affected remains uncertain. The urgency of arming Ukraine's military grows as Russia intensifies its summer offensive, after three years of conflict, launching waves of drones and ballistic and cruise missiles on Ukrainian cities.
The timeline for when the promised U.S.-made weapons, especially the Patriot systems, will arrive in Ukraine remains unclear. Former President Trump had agreed to send the weapons, but European nations are covering the cost. U.S. Ambassador to NATO, Matthew Whitaker, remarked that he could not provide a specific timeframe for when Ukraine might receive additional foreign weapons. 'We are all moving with haste to facilitate this and get this done. Things are actually moving very quickly, but I can't verify a date that this will all be completed. I think it's going to be an ongoing movement,' he stated in Brussels.
'The plan is that there will be American-made defense equipment, capabilities, that will be sold to our European allies, that they will provide to Ukraine,' he added. On Thursday, British Defense Secretary John Healey announced that he and German counterpart Boris Pistorius will co-chair a meeting of Ukraine's allies on Monday to discuss U.S. President Donald Trump's weapons plans. U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and NATO head Mark Rutte are expected to attend the meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group.
NATO's Supreme Allied Commander Europe, Gen. Alexus Grynkewich, said on Thursday that "preparations are underway" for weapons transfers to Ukraine and that NATO is collaborating "very closely" with Germany on the transfer of Patriot systems. Speaking at a military event in Wiesbaden, Germany, Grynkewich revealed that he had been instructed to "move (the weapons) out as quickly as possible" and noted that the exact number of weapons being transferred is classified.
A spokesperson from the German Defense Ministry, Mitko Müller, stated on Wednesday that he could not confirm whether any weapons were currently on their way to Ukraine. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte stated on Monday in Washington that the alliance is coordinating military support, with funding from European and Canadian allies. He highlighted commitments from Germany, Finland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Canada, with further commitments anticipated.
Zelenskyy noted that Ukraine's domestic defense manufacturing already accounts for nearly 40% of the weapons used by its military. Given the uncertainty surrounding the volume and speed of additional Western weapons shipments, Ukraine is eager to increase its domestic output and expand its operations against Russian targets. 'What we need is greater capacity to push the war back onto Russia's territory - back to where the war was brought from,' Zelenskyy emphasized in his late Wednesday video address.
'We must reach the level of 50% Ukrainian-made weapons within the first six months of the new government's work by expanding our domestic production,' he added. Ukraine has also developed long-range drones to carry out deep strikes inside Russian territory.
Russian air defenses claimed to have shot down 122 Ukrainian drones overnight, the Russian defense ministry reported Thursday. The drone attack grounded flights at Moscow and St. Petersburg airports, although most of the drones were destroyed over the border regions of Bryansk and Kursk. In retaliation, Russia launched 64 Shahed and decoy drones at Ukraine overnight, killing at least one person, according to the Ukrainian air force. The assault focused on the industrial Dnipropetrovsk region.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Huge £145m EuroMillions jackpot to be won TONIGHT – just hours before Lottery shut down for days
Huge £145m EuroMillions jackpot to be won TONIGHT – just hours before Lottery shut down for days

The Sun

time20 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Huge £145m EuroMillions jackpot to be won TONIGHT – just hours before Lottery shut down for days

A MASSIVE £145 million EuroMillions jackpot is up for grabs tonight just hours before the lottery shuts down for days. From 11pm on Saturday, all draw-based game entries and in-store prize claims will be suspended as the National Lottery undergoes a major technology upgrade. Services will be down until Monday morning - including the National Lottery app and website - in what has been called the biggest system overhaul in more than three decades. Players participating in tonight's £145 million draw or this weekend's Lotto and Thunderball games have been urged to act quickly to avoid disappointment. Keen participants must pick up their ticket before Saturday night's deadline. And for those looking to increase their odds, top lottery expert Simon Horne exclusively tells Sun readers how to boost their chances of bagging the whole lot. From picking your lucky numbers to whether you should join a syndicate, there's a heap of practical ways to boost your chances of getting richer overnight. Of course, the only real way of increasing your chances of winning is to buy more tickets. Make sure you gamble responsibly. Only gamble with money you can afford to lose, and set a money limit before playing. If you need advice, visit or Is a syndicate worth it? A lottery syndicate is when a group of people put money into a pot for lottery tickets. There will be one person in charge - the syndicate manager - who will buy tickets and share out any winnings out among the group. Playing as part of a group could be a good way of boosting your chances of winning, as Simon, from The National Lottery operator Allwyn UK, explains. "If you join a syndicate of 10 people, then there's 10 tickets and 10 chances of winning, so there's clearly a greater chance of winning compared to if you just bought your own ticket," he said. The syndicate manager will need to register the group and list themselves as the person in charge with The National Lottery. Make sure to write all the terms and conditions of the agreement down, and get each person to sign it, said Simon. "If there's any confusion or complications down the line, then you can refer back to the agreement and then everyone knows where they stand," he said. The big downside to consider being part of a syndicate is that you'll need to equally split the pot between each person. So, if you were part of a syndicate of four people, splitting the £145million jackpot four ways would leave you with over £36million each - although that's still big winnings to walk away with. Pick YOUR lucky numbers You might think that picking up the most common numbers may mean you are more likely to win. The number 20 has been drawn the most at 111 times, according to which tracks lottery results. That's followed by the number 21 and 23, which has been drawn 109 times, then 42 (107 times) then 29 (104 times). The most common Lucky Stars are 3, which has been drawn 181 times and 2, which has been drawn 176 times. But you're better off picking whichever numbers you feel are best, said Simon. That's because, statistically, each number has an equal chance of being drawn. Many people pick their birthday numbers because they think they are lucky. "We all have lucky numbers - I know plenty of players who lean on lucky numbers, which could be phone numbers or numbers passed down from family members," said Simon. "Every set of numbers has the same chance of coming out. "The best strategy to play is the one that you think will bring you luck." Monitor your numbers Not sure your lucky numbers are working for you? You could keep an eye on how often your lucky numbers are being drawn, and if they're not coming up as often as you would like, you can try a different tact. The National Lottery app stores all your tickets from draws you have entered. The app is free to download from either the App Store on iPhone, or the Google Play store on Android devices. That means you can go back in and check your most profitable numbers. You could make a spreadsheet of how often your lucky numbers are being drawn, and every three months, see whether it's worth keeping them, or ditching them for alternatives. According to the unluckiest Euromillions numbers are You might want to avoid "unlucky" numbers - which are the ones drawn the least. These are 22 (66 times), 40 (74 times) and 18 and 43 (78 times). The National Lottery app is free to download from either the App Store or Google Play. Timing matters Timing matters when it comes to buying your ticket, said Simon. If you leave it to the last minute, then there's a risk that you run out of time to buy your ticket. You need to buy your ticket before 7:30pm tonight - otherwise you'll miss out. "My main advice is not to leave it too late - don't rush into the newsagents or load up your app at 7:25pm," he said. "You might not be able to upload money onto your online account, or buy your ticket, in time and you could miss the draw."

Today's Supreme Court ruling was a narrow miss for the economy
Today's Supreme Court ruling was a narrow miss for the economy

Telegraph

time20 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Today's Supreme Court ruling was a narrow miss for the economy

Britain is still, just about, a country in which it is possible to do business. The Supreme Court's decision today saw a drastic reduction in the scope of potential compensation claims against car finance lenders. To the extent that a 'scandal' existed in this field, it is the degree to which the British legal system had appeared prepared to rewrite the terms of loans made close to two decades ago in line with a vague sense that customers deserved a better deal. The direct losses to the financial sector (tens of billions of pounds in compensation claims) would have been significant on their own terms. The economic damage, however, could have been far more widespread. The effect of such a broad-ranging retrospective verdict would have had a chilling effect on the willingness of lenders to take risks in the British market. Who would want to lend money in a country where a court could decide years afterwards that compensation should be awarded to people who signed up to a loan knowing what they would pay and what they would get simply based on the salesman's commission? It is a testament to the sheer terror with which the Treasury would have viewed this prospect and the associated losses of growth and tax revenues that Chancellor Rachel Reeves was reportedly looking into legislative means to overturn a decision that went against the banks; it is hard to think of a stance less natural for this Labour Government to adopt. As things stand, there are still potential claims against those whose loans came with 'excessive' commissions. These should suffice as a warning shot against predatory practices, should any be needed. But it is worth saying that this may not be wholly desirable either. The principle of 'caveat emptor' may have fallen out of fashion, but it is far from clear that the compensation culture we have erected in its place is superior. Investing time and effort into understanding the terms and conditions of a purchase seems increasingly irrational: simply lay out your cash and should you subsequently have regrets, rest safe in the knowledge that the legal system will find a way to attempt to claw it back. This compensation does not materialise from the ether. When it is paid out, the cost is frequently borne by other consumers, who face higher prices or fewer options. This time around, we have at least arrived at a sensible conclusion. The Treasury and Ms Reeves can breathe a sigh of relief. Parliament, however, may wish to give serious thought as to the desirability of a legal structure that permits this sort of uncertainty to arise, and the incentives which it offers the public.

Trump says he will fire head of BLS as stocks shudder
Trump says he will fire head of BLS as stocks shudder

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Trump says he will fire head of BLS as stocks shudder

US President Donald Trump said he would fire the head of the agency charged with publishing some of America's most closely watched economic data, after a weaker-than-expected jobs report stoked further alarm about his tariff policies. His decision to move forward with plans to sharply raise tariffs on goods from countries around the world had already sent financial markets in the US shuddering. In the US, the three major indexes dropped, with the S&P falling 1.9% by mid-afternoon. That followed earlier sell-offs in Europe and Asia, as investors dumped shares of firms such as South Korean steel manufacturers and German truck-maker Daimler. Trump's plans leave most goods coming into the US facing new taxes of 10% to 50%, depending on their origin, and will lift tariff rates in the US to the highest levels in nearly a says the measures will rebalance global trade and boost US analysts say they will raise prices for businesses and consumers in the US and weigh on the US and global economies, as sales, hiring and investment slow. This week has revived fears about economic damage, as companies update investors on their costs and new data points to slowdown in the US. Employers in the US added just 73,000 jobs in July, according the monthly Labor Department report published on also dramatically revised estimates of job growth in May and June, with far fewer gains than previously thought."The economic data since the Liberation Day announcements did not reflect that sharp deterioration in economic activity, or at least not in obvious ways. This was the week that changed," analysts at Wells Fargo wrote on Friday. The revisions appeared to spur Trump to fire the commissioner of labor statistics, Erika McEntarfer, in a post on social media."We need accurate Jobs Numbers. I have directed my Team to fire this Biden Political Appointee, IMMEDIATELY," he wrote on social media, referring to the large revisions to the May and June jobs numbers. Trump also lashed out at Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell, whom he has angrily criticised in recent in the US opened lower in the morning, with losses accelerating over the course of the afternoon. France's CAC 40 closed down 2.9%, while German's DAX fell 2.6%. In the UK, the FTSE fell 0.7%.Earlier the leading index in South Korea fell 3.8%, the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong dropped 1% and Japan's Nikkei fell 0.6%. When Trump first put forward his plans in April, shares in the US tumbled more than 10% in a week, the concerns spreading to the dollar and bond stock market recovered after he suspended some of the most drastic measures, leaving in place a less punishing, more expected 10% levy. In recent weeks, indexes in the US have been trading around all-time highs. "The reality is Trump got emboldened by the fact that markets came right back," Michael Gayed, portfolio manager for The Free Markets ETF told the BBC's Opening Bell. "Now he's going to try his luck again." The latest measures are less extreme than what Trump first put forward in April, when goods from key players in southeast Asia, such as Vietnam, were facing tariff rates of more than 40% and a tit-for-tat exchange with China drove US tariffs on its exports surge to at least 145%.But the tariffs still make for a radical change for the US, for decades a champion of free plans include a minimum 10% tax on most goods entering the US, with major trade partners, including the European Union, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam face tariffs in the range of 15% to 20%.Goods from China are set to facing new 30% levies, while exports from some other countries, including Switzerland and Laos face even higher changes, which are set to go into effect on 7 August, will lift the average tariff rate to roughly 18%, up from less than 2.5% as recently as had been taking the impact of tariffs in stride, sending shares in the US and elsewhere to new highs in recent weeks. Mr Gayed said markets had become less sensitive to Trump's rapidly changing trade policies, but he saw risks ahead. "The more he just whips around policy, the more the markets will not care, but as the old saying goes, nothing matters 'til it matters and then it's the only thing that matters," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store