logo
Long-distance arms: German money for Ukraine's combat drones – DW – 08/03/2025

Long-distance arms: German money for Ukraine's combat drones – DW – 08/03/2025

DW2 days ago
Germany is investing more in the production of Ukrainian weaponry, particularly long-range drones. What is possible, and what are the limits?
Apartment buildings in flames and clouds of smoke over the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv: Almost every day, Russia attacks the country with drones and rockets. In response, Ukraine is defending itself, including by striking targets deeper inside Russia. It's quite possible that in these long-distance attacks, drones produced with German funds are being used.
"This is the beginning of a new form of military-industrial cooperation between our countries, one that has great potential," German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said in late May when Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited Berlin.
The two countries' defense ministries signed an agreement back then: Germany would finance long-range weapons but they are to be produced in Ukraine. Two months later, not many details about the arrangement have become public. "The process is ongoing," Mitko Müller, a senior spokesperson for Germany's Ministry of Defense, told DW in late July.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
In June 2024, Denmark became the first NATO member state to get involved in the Ukrainian arms industry.
German arms manufacturers are represented in Ukraine, with Rheinmetall, an arms manufacturer headquartered in Düsseldorf, likely the most visible. The industrial giant is expanding its presence there and is engaged in a number of joint ventures. For example, tanks are being manufactured and repaired there and an ammunition factory being built.
"We are seeing a huge change in Germany's approach toward Ukraine, a complete opening up," Ihor Fedirko, the chief executive of the Ukrainian Council of Defense Industry (UCDI= told DW.
Direct investments by the German government into Ukrainian drone and missile production are still a relative novelty. According to , a German newspaper, Germany intends to fund around 500 An-196 Liutyi drones, one-way attack, unmanned aerial vehicles. Ukrainian media reports suggest that each drone costs around $200,000 (€175,000).
The drone was developed as a result of previous cooperation between Turkey and Ukraine. The An-196 Liutyi "was already quite advanced in its development and testing," military expert Gustav Gressel, formerly a senior policy fellow with the European Council on Foreign Relations, explained. A very high proportion of these drones are shot down though, Gressel continued, because they fly fairly slowly, at similar speeds to comparable Russian models.
Apart from funds, Ukraine is also hoping for German know-how. "We lack deep-tech technologies," Fedirko explains, referring to cutting-edge engineering. "This affects the component base. Equipped with this kind of knowledge, we could modernize more thoroughly and become more efficient," he said. Germany has these technologies.
Currently Ukraine is asking all of its allies for technology that would enable long-range weapons, Fedirko continued.
"We're talking about a range of between 500 and 1,000 kilometers," he explains. "Some of them [the weapons] — for example, the deep-strike Liutyi, can already get to targets more than 2,000 kilometers away."
Many German defense companies getting more active in Ukraine are startups, mostly based in Bavaria. One example is Quantum Systems, a firm specializing in aerial data and making unmanned aerial systems to collect it.
Fedirko describes this as a "best-case scenario" of the kind of cooperation Ukraine wants.
Founded in 2015, Quantum Systems has been supplying its Vector reconnaissance drones to the Ukrainian army since 2022. A special feature of the Vector is its ability to take off and land vertically.
"We are the only Western company producing reconnaissance drones where they are most urgently needed: on-site in Ukraine," says Sven Kruck, co-chief executive at Quantum Systems. His company employs around 200 people in Ukraine, and it's growing; a second production plant is scheduled to open in September.
In mid-July, Quantum Systems announced that it would also acquire a 10% stake in Frontline, a Ukrainian drone manufacturer. It will have the option to increase that stake to 25% over the next year.
"Frontline specializes in technical solutions for reconnaissance and strike operations. Its systems are currently used by 41 military units in Ukraine," Kruck explained. "We see potential for cooperation, especially in the development of drone defense." However, he added, his company doesn't plan to get into combat drones.
Combat drones are being made by another German company, Helsing. The Bavarian firm has already delivered thousands of drones to Ukraine and, last February, announced a new contract for over 6,000 HX-2 strike drones. According to online publication Defense industry Europe, the HX-2 is "an electrically propelled X-wing precision munition with a range of up to 100 kilometers."
Its use of advanced computing also makes it more resistant to electronic warfare. Helsing did not respond to DW's enquiries asking for further details.
However, as much as the Ukrainians might be pleased about German funding and investments into drones, demand still far outstrips supply.
Gressel argues that Ukraine needs bulk supplies of good quality. These can only be produced cost-effectively inside Ukraine itself.
The same argument applies to missiles, such as the Taurus cruise missiles, a weapon the Germans are currently unwilling to supply. However, Gressel suggests that cooperation with German companies might enable some parts to be supplied. That could increase the range of Ukraine's own Neptune cruise missiles, with more energy-efficient engines that could fly further on the same amount of fuel and more accurate sensors, which would help land-based targeting. However, a decision on supplies like that has yet to be made.
Germany is not only more willing to invest in Ukraine but also to share knowledge. At the start of the war, there were fears that modern German technology could fall into Russian hands and doubt about the reliability of the Ukrainian military personnel, Gressel explains. That's one of the reasons why Ukraine initially received older weaponry.
But that's changed. This is partly due to the fact that Ukraine now produces modern weapons itself and can compete with other manufacturers.
"German companies are learning things here that you never get to simulate in peacetime," Gressel notes. For example, Ukraine's combat zone is absolutely packed with jammers, jamming devices and air defense systems, the sort of thing you'd never get anywhere else, not on a NATO training ground, in simulations in Germany, nor in the US.
The defense industry recognizes this, Gressel says.
Quantum Systems' Kruck can confirm that. "Drone development is a game of cat and mouse," he told DW. "Only those who are on site can adapt to all the constant changes. Our insights from Ukraine flow directly into our product development, which we make available to all our customers worldwide."
He sees his company's work in Ukraine as a "flagship project" and wants to encourage others to emulate it.
The UCDI's Fedirko would like to see this kind of cooperation go even further. "Germany is a country with typical European bureaucracy," he admits. "So it takes time to get things done. But when the Germans say they're doing something, we Ukrainians know it will get done." To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Says To Name New Labor Statistics Chief This Week
Trump Says To Name New Labor Statistics Chief This Week

Int'l Business Times

time2 hours ago

  • Int'l Business Times

Trump Says To Name New Labor Statistics Chief This Week

President Donald Trump said Monday that he would pick an "exceptional replacement" to his labor statistics chief, days after ordering her dismissal as a report showed weakness in the US jobs market. In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump reiterated -- without providing evidence -- that Friday's employment report "was rigged." He alleged that commissioner of labor statistics Erika McEntarfer had manipulated data to diminish his administration's accomplishments, drawing sharp criticism from economists and a professional association. "We'll be announcing a new (labor) statistician some time over the next three-four days," Trump told reporters Sunday. He added Monday: "I will pick an exceptional replacement." US job growth missed expectations in July, figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed, and sharp revisions to hiring figures in recent months brought them to the weakest levels since the Covid-19 pandemic. Trump ordered the removal of McEntarfer hours after the figures were published. "We had no confidence. I mean the numbers were ridiculous," Trump told reporters Sunday. He charged that McEntarfer came up with "phenomenal" numbers on his predecessor Joe Biden's economy before the 2024 election. Even as he called for more reliable data Monday, White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett conceded that the jobs market was indeed cooling. But Hassett maintained in a CNBC interview that this softening did not reflect the incoming effects of Trump's flagship tax and spending legislation -- signed into law early last month. US employment data point to challenges as companies took a cautious approach in hiring and investment while grappling with Trump's sweeping -- and rapidly changing -- tariffs this year. The United States added 73,000 jobs in July, while the unemployment rate rose to 4.2 percent, the Department of Labor reported. Hiring numbers for May were revised down from 144,000 to 19,000. The figure for June was shifted from 147,000 to 14,000. These were notably lower than job creation levels in recent years. During the pandemic, the economy lost jobs. Over the weekend, Hassett defended McEntarfer's firing in an NBC News interview: "The president wants his own people there so that when we see the numbers they are more transparent and more reliable." But Trump's decision has come under fire. William Beach, who previously held McEntarfer's post, said the move set a "dangerous precedent." The National Association for Business Economics condemned her dismissal, saying large revisions in jobs numbers "reflect not manipulation, but rather the dwindling resources afforded to statistical agencies." German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil on Monday emphasized the importance of supporting "independent, neutral and proven institutions." He said: "It is right that independent institutions remain independent and that politics do not interfere with them." McEntarfer, a labor economist, was confirmed to the commissioner role in January 2024.

Germany updates: Finance Minister in US amid tariff tension – DW – 08/04/2025
Germany updates: Finance Minister in US amid tariff tension – DW – 08/04/2025

DW

time3 hours ago

  • DW

Germany updates: Finance Minister in US amid tariff tension – DW – 08/04/2025

Germany's Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil is set to meet with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent for talks on trade and trans-Atlantic ties. His visit comes on the heels of a US-EU tariff deal. DW has more. German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil is in Washington on his first official visit to the US since taking office office. Klingbeil is set meet US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to discuss trade, global cooperation, and trans-Atlantic ties. The talks follow a key deal easing tariffs between the EU and the US, cutting duties on European imports to 15%. The finance minister earlier told German media that "weaknesses" had been "exposed" during the wrangling over US tariffs. Meanwhile, just 16% of Germans say they would be willing to take up arms in the event of an attack, a new study has revealed, while more than a quarter of those surveyed said they considered a military attack on the country within the next five years to be very or somewhat likely. And Bavarian State Premier Markus Söder has called for a reduction in benefit rates for Ukrainian refugees in Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil has urged closer international cooperation as he prepares to meet US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in Washington on Monday, following the European Union's recent tariff deal with President Donald Trump. "I think that our weaknesses have already been exposed in the dispute with the Americans over customs duties," Klingbeil said in an interview with Deutschlandfunk radio ahead of the visit. He called for deeper coordination with other key partners such as Canada and the United Kingdom, adding, "We must become stronger." The EU and the US reached a compromise late last month after prolonged trade tensions. The deal, brokered by Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, sets a 15% tariff on most EU exports to the US — down from a previously threatened 30%. Klingbeil welcomed the agreement but said critical details still needed clarification. He admitted he had hoped for a more favorable outcome and stressed that his priority now was to protect German jobs and industries, particularly in the steel sector. He also raised questions about elements of the agreement, including its impact on steel exports and the possibility of a quota system. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video German scientists drilled thousands of meters into the Antarctic ice sheet to retrieve the world's oldest ice sample. They hope it could provide insight into today's climate crisis. Read the full story about what the German scientists found in the Antarctic ice. Economy Minister Katherina Reiche said Monday that Germany and Europe must boost their position in the global chip market. During a visit to the construction site of chipmaker Infineon's new factory in Dresden, the CDU lawmaker said semiconductor manufacturing is vital in maintaining Germany's economic resilience and its competitiveness as a business location. The European Union currently accounts for around 8% of global semiconductor production, while the demand stands at 20%. "That means we have to catch up," Reiche said. Infineon is building a new chip facility in Dresden with €1 billion ($1.1 billion) in federal government funding contributing toward the total cost of €5 billion. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video In Germany's cities, begging is a sad reality. Every day, people like Claude and Cecilia fight for survival – and their dignity. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video German police said Monday that a man electrocuted himself while taking a selfie, after climbing onto a stationary train at Cologne central station. Police said the man got too close to a power line and suffered severe burns as a result. He was taken to hospital and, while conscious, he said he climbed onto the train roof to take a selfie, the police statement said. Even though he did not make direct contact, an electric arc was created with a current approximately 65 times stronger than that of a conventional power socket, police said. Police have asked for people who may have witnessed the incident, which occurred on Sunday, to come forward. Women in Germany are having just 1.35 children on average — a record low level. Does this say something about the country's state of prosperity, or is it a sign that women are asserting their rights? Read the full story on Germany's falling birth rate. Lawmakers from Germany's governing coalition are calling for tougher measures against unemployment benefit fraud, amid growing concerns over rising costs. "Those who exploit the system must be met with clear sanctions," Dirk Wiese, the parliamentary secretary of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), told the Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland (RND) media group. Wiese said he believes changes to the basic income support scheme, known as Bürgergeld, were necessary. The SPD politician also stressed that the majority of those who seek financial help while not working want to be in employment. Wiese said he also wants to see an increase to the minimum wage. Tilman Kuban, a lawmaker for the conservative Christian Democrats, which leads Germany's coalition along with the SPD, also called for more scrutiny regarding unemployment benefits. "The new basic income can only be for those who really need help — not for those who don't want to work," he told RND. In 2024, the state paid out some €46.9 billion ($54.3 billion) in basic unemployment support to around 5.5 million people. That was around €4 billion more than in 2023, according to the Ministry of Social Affairs. Police and spy agencies are keen to combat criminality and terrorism with artificial intelligence. But critics say the CIA-funded Palantir surveillance software enables "predictive policing." Read the full story on the controversial Palantir software being used by German police. German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) is in Washington on Monday for talks with his US counterpart Scott Bessent, a week after the EU agreed with the United States on a 15% tariff for most European goods. The pair are expected to discuss issues related to trade while also maintaining and expanding the transatlantic partnership, the Ministry of Finance said ahead of the trip. Klingbeil will also meet with World Bank President Ajay Banga and civil society actors to discuss issues of global security and sustainable growth. The premier of Bavaria, Markus Söder, said it is time to reduce the benefits for Ukrainian refugees in Germany. Söder is in favor of offering Ukrainians lower benefits under the Asylum Seekers Benefits Act, as opposed to the citizen's allowance, which is currently in place. In an interview with German broadcaster ZDF, Söder said he is in favor of reducing benefits for certain Ukrainian refugees. Söder said there should be "no more citizen's allowance for all those who have come from Ukraine." The citizen's allowance in Germany is a state welfare benefit given to those with little or no income to ensure a minimum standard of living. Around one in six Germans say they would join the military in the event of a conflict or a call to arms, a new survey revealed on Monday. Conducted by the research institute Forsa for the RND media group, the poll recorded that 16% of participants said they would "definitely" fight, while another 22% said they would "probably" do so. However, 59% said they would "probably not" or definitely not be willing to defend Germany in the event of an attack. Among women, that reluctance is 72%. More than one in four respondents (27%) said they considered a military attack on Germany within the next five years to be very or somewhat likely. Meanwhile, 59% of respondents said they felt it was likely that Germany would have to provide military assistance to another NATO member. Around 1,000 citizens took part in the survey which was carried out on July 28 and July 29, amid heightened debate regarding Germany's defense preparation and increased spending in this area. According to Forsa, the results carry a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points. In May, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said that Berlin accepts in principle the demand from the United States that NATO member states increase defense spending to 5% of GDP. Currently, Germany spends around 2% of its GDP on defense. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video from the DW newsroom. German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil is in Washington for talks with his US counterpart Scott Bessent. Elsewhere, Markus Söder has called for an end to the citizen's allowance for Ukrainian refugees in Germany, preferring to offer lower benefits under the Asylum Seekers Benefits Act. A survey of around 1,000 German citizens has been conducted, amid heightened discussion over the country's defense readiness. Follow us for stories on how Germany is coping with the myriad of challenges faced by many countries today, as well as a general roundup of the major talking points regarding Europe's largest economy.

China's Baidu To Deploy Robotaxis On Rideshare App Lyft
China's Baidu To Deploy Robotaxis On Rideshare App Lyft

Int'l Business Times

time4 hours ago

  • Int'l Business Times

China's Baidu To Deploy Robotaxis On Rideshare App Lyft

Chinese internet giant Baidu plans to launch its robotaxis on rideshare app Lyft in Germany and Britain in 2026, pending regulatory approval, the two companies said on Monday. Last month, Baidu announced a similar agreement with Uber in Asia and the Middle East as it seeks to take pole position in the competitive autonomous driving field both at home and abroad. Lyft and Baidu said Monday that "in the following years" the fleet of Apollo Go driverless cars will be expanded to thousands of vehicles across Europe. They did not specify which other countries the cars would be deployed in, and it was not clear how long it might take to gain regulatory approval for the initial deployment. Driverless taxis are already on some roads with limited capacity in the United States and China, most notably in the central city of Wuhan, where a fleet of over 500 can be hailed by app in designated areas. Their reach is spreading, with Shanghai's financial district Pudong recently announcing a batch of permits for multiple companies to operate robotaxis. China's tech companies and automakers have poured billions of dollars into self-driving technology in recent years, with intelligent driving the new battleground in the country's cutthroat domestic car market. Baidu is not alone among Chinese companies in searching to expand its foothold abroad. Its rival WeRide is also active in the Gulf region, and in January announced it had been picked to lead a small pilot project in Switzerland. another Chinese company, said in May that it had signed a deal to launch its self-driving taxis on Uber in "a key market in the Middle East later this year". San Francisco-based Lyft in April said it had agreed to buy German taxi app Freenow, planting a flag in the European market. The acquisition marked Lyft's "most significant expansion outside North America", the group 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