A longer Iran conflict could boost risk for Ukraine securing missile defences, Zelenskiy says

A longer Iran conflict could boost risk for Ukraine securing missile defences, Zelenskiy says
Zelensky said Ukraine was able to ‌secure US ‌weaponry through the PURL program ​under ‌which ⁠NATO ​countries can finance ⁠the purchase of weapons for Kyiv. (AFP/File)
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A longer Iran conflict could boost risk for Ukraine securing missile defences, Zelenskiy says

A longer Iran conflict could boost risk for Ukraine securing missile defences, Zelenskiy says

Ukraine could face ‌increased risks in securing US anti-missile defenses if the war in Iran goes on for an extended period of ​time, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Wednesday.
Zelensky, interviewed by CNN, said Ukraine received limited numbers of such weaponry because US production was limited, but so far it had experienced no disruption in supplies or in provision of intelligence.
Zelensky said Ukraine was able to ‌secure US ‌weaponry through the PURL program ​under ‌which ⁠NATO ​countries can finance ⁠the purchase of weapons for Kyiv.
“Through this program, we can include and buy anti-ballistic missiles for Patriot systems and some other weapons which is very important for us. We don’t have this...with our European neighbors,” Zelensky told CNN ⁠in English.
“And of course, (given) the big challenge ‌in the Middle ‌East war and Iran, all these ​packages are at ‌risk.”
The United States, he said, had supplied “only ‌a small number. We had not too much. We understand why, because the production in the United States is not so big.
“And if the war ‌will continue or a ceasefire is delayed...(this) will be not good. And maybe ⁠we ⁠will have more risks with anti-ballistics.”
Zelensky repeated that Ukraine was making available to countries in the Middle East the know-how it has acquired in four years of countering drones deployed by Russian forces, many of them designed by Iran.
Agreements had been signed with Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
“We will continue to work with other countries,” he ​said. “We will be ​ready to deliver first our expertise...and the second point is training missions.”