The State Department on Nov. 18 approved the potential sale of the Patriot air defense system sustainment and related equipment to Ukraine, worth an estimated $105 million.
The DSCA stated that it had delivered the notification of the approval to Congress. The agency also stated that the proposed sale “will not alter the basic military balance in the region.”
It noted that there will be no adverse effect on U.S. defense capabilities as a result of the potential deal.
Patriot Systems
The Patriot, which stands for Phased Array Tracking Radar for Intercept on Target, is a theater-wide surface-to-air missile defense system and is considered one of the most advanced air defense systems in the U.S. arsenal.The system was first used in combat during the 1991 Gulf War, with batteries protecting Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Israel, and later used during the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. The mobile system usually includes powerful radar, a control station, a power generator, launch stations, and other support vehicles.
The system was designed before hypersonic weapons were sent to the battlefield. Raytheon has not said publicly whether it is effective against a missile flying at hypersonic speeds. In 2023, the United States stated that a Patriot system brought down a Russian Khinzal missile, but it was not clear if that missile was traveling at hypersonic speed at the time.
“European colleagues can help us here—they can lend us their systems now and then take back ours once they arrive from the manufacturers. These systems are produced over several years, and we would not want to wait,” Zelenskyy said.
“Ukraine now has more Patriots,” Zelenskyy said. “More Patriots are now in Ukraine and being put into operation. Of course, more systems are needed to protect key infrastructure sites and our cities across the entire territory of our state.”


Pistorius said in a statement that Germany would make the first arms transfer to Ukraine under this framework, shipping two Patriot systems to Ukraine and additional system components in the next two to three months.
PURL Initiative
NATO is coordinating deliveries of weapons to Ukraine under its Prioritised Ukraine Requirements List (PURL) initiative, which sees allies send materiel, including munitions for Patriot systems, to bolster Ukraine’s air defenses.Last week, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden joined fellow Nordic countries Finland and Iceland and Baltic nations Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania in another round of funding, jointly contributing $500 million in military equipment and munitions for Kyiv, sourced from the United States.
“Our Nordic and Baltic Allies are stepping up to fund a further package of critical military equipment for Ukraine,“ he said in a Nov. 13 statement. ”This equipment is extremely important as Ukraine enters the winter months, and deliveries through PURL are flowing into Ukraine. NATO Allies will continue to deliver essential equipment and supplies.”







