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Drones: Industry & Defence
7JUN

Lockheed locks in $4.76bn Patriot run

2 min read
11:27UTC

The Pentagon's four-year Patriot production contract routes 94% of the missile run to foreign buyers before the first round leaves the factory, locking Ukraine's mid-May shortfall in as a structural condition rather than a temporary shortage.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ukraine's Patriot shortfall is now a four-year structural condition, not a temporary shortage.

On 9 April the US Army awarded Lockheed Martin a $4.76 billion firm-fixed-price contract for PAC-3 MSE (Patriot Advanced Capability-3 Missile Segment Enhancement) interceptor production, with a completion date of 30 June 2030 1. The headline number looks generous, but the delivery calendar does not close Ukraine's mid-May gap.

Ninety-four percent of the run is already committed to FMS (foreign military sales programmes), the inter-government route that gets weapons to allies ahead of the domestic queue. That implies roughly 36 Patriot rounds a year reaching Ukraine under current foreign-sales weighting, against the 60 to 65 Volodymyr Zelenskyy told the BBC Kyiv needs each month. The fast assembly lines are building missiles for Saudi Arabia and the UAE before the Ukrainian allocation is even on the schedule.

Zelenskyy's figure covers ballistic and cruise missiles, not Shaheds. Ukraine's own STING interceptor drone, which destroyed two Shahed-type targets from 500 km on 4 April , covers the Shahed half of the air-defence problem but not the ballistic half. Contract arithmetic and Ukraine's mid-May stockpile deadline do not meet in the same calendar year.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US military has signed a long-term deal with defence contractor Lockheed Martin to make Patriot missiles, the type used to shoot down Russian rockets and drones. The problem: 94 out of every 100 missiles made under the deal are already promised to other countries, leaving almost none for Ukraine. Patriot missiles are expensive precision weapons that can intercept ballistic missiles mid-flight. Ukraine needs roughly 60-65 per month just to maintain its current defence. The new contract does not change that shortage.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The production ceiling stems from two structural constraints the Iran war made acute. First, the PAC-3 MSE seeker assembly relies on a single-source supplier in Tucson with a 36-month expansion lead time. Second, the US Army mothballed its interceptor surge capacity after 2014 to fund longer-range missile programmes, and no congressional authority for emergency production expansion has been sought.

The 94% FMS pre-commitment is itself a product of the post-2022 rearmament cycle: European NATO members ordered at scale after the full-scale invasion, locking production slots that would otherwise have been available for replenishment.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Ukraine's mid-May interceptor stockpile deadline will not be resolved by this contract; alternative supply routes or emergency presidential authority will be required.

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Risk

    If the 6% domestic allocation is not expanded, the US Army's own air defence reserve will remain below wartime replenishment levels through at least mid-2028.

    Medium term · 0.72
  • Precedent

    The contract establishes that the post-Iran war rearmament cycle will be served by FMS agreements ahead of wartime partner resupply, a reversal of Cold War emergency-transfer doctrine.

    Long term · 0.68
First Reported In

Update #12 · Three narrowings of US support for Kyiv

Defense News· 11 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark accepted Fire Point's Skrydstrup plant after committing to bilateral defence co-production at the B9 Nordic summit in May; the facility sits beside a Danish F-35 base, sharing security perimeters. NATO has published no legal guidance on whether hosting Ukrainian weapons production converts Denmark into a co-belligerent, leaving the host-state obligation unresolved.
Russian Ministry of Defence
Russian Ministry of Defence
Russia's 117% YoY drone-output rise in April, accelerating from a 68% full-year 2025 baseline, validates the FPV mass-production doctrine and hands Moscow a cleaner targeting argument for the Skrydstrup plant than any hidden production line offered; a Ukrainian weapons facility on NATO sovereign territory is a legitimate military target under the laws of armed conflict.
Baltic NATO states (Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania)
Baltic NATO states (Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania)
Latvia deployed mobile drone-intercept teams on 29 May using domestic Origin Robotics and Eraser interceptors, the first kinetic Baltic border response to Russia's 117% output surge. The Baltic states are the primary target market for Ukraine's ten EU export offices, giving them direct commercial access to combat-tested interceptors their own manufacturers have not yet matched.
Pentagon / Joint Interagency Task Force 401
Pentagon / Joint Interagency Task Force 401
Two Ukrainian entrants in Drone Dominance Phase 2 and Red Cat's SEC-filed STE partnership bring combat-iterated Ukrainian designs into US procurement without triggering Foreign Military Sale approvals; the programme's performance-scoring methodology does not require US-origin hardware. Northrop holding the Common UAS Payload standard means a heritage prime captures interface revenue regardless of which startup airframe wins.
Ukrainian defence industry (Fire Point / Spetstechnoexport)
Ukrainian defence industry (Fire Point / Spetstechnoexport)
Fire Point's Skrydstrup construction start and Spetstechnoexport's Red Cat partnership execute Zelensky's 13 May Bucharest proposal: converting wartime production surplus into a state export apparatus, independent of US approval chains. For Ukraine, embedded manufacturing on NATO soil protects propellant supply from Russian strikes while generating hard currency the war effort needs.
Chinese drone manufacturers (DJI, Autel)
Chinese drone manufacturers (DJI, Autel)
Autel's Ralls Corp Fifth Amendment filing and DJI's Ninth Circuit quantification of USD 1.56 billion in 2026 losses are parallel constitutional attacks on a classified-evidence exclusion mechanism; neither company can contest the intelligence allegations directly, so both are betting on due-process doctrine to reopen the FCC authorisation route.