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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
13MAY

Zelenskyy: Patriot situation 'could not be any worse'

3 min read
20:00UTC

One day after signing the Berlin defence package, Kyiv's president told ZDF the ballistic-intercept gap remains unaddressed. The statement resolves an ambiguity the wires had left open.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Paying Raytheon in euros works; the US licence for the class Kyiv actually needs does not.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine's President, told German public broadcaster ZDF (Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen) on 15 April that Ukraine's Patriot situation "could not be any worse." The interview aired one day after the Berlin signing of the Germany-Ukraine defence package covered in event 5.

The apparent contradiction resolves on airframe class. Germany purchased lower-tier interceptors via direct commercial sale to Raytheon; the ballistic-class airframe Ukraine needs against Iskanders and Kinzhals was not on the Berlin contract and remains unavailable under the White House export freeze. Zelenskyy had first flagged the ballistic gap to the BBC in March , citing the interceptor-spend-versus-stock ratio summarised in event 5. The ZDF remark is the first time he has publicly graded that gap as worse now than then.

The statement matters for what it constrains. Wire coverage of the Berlin package had framed its headline euro figure as substantial Ukrainian air defence reinforcement, which is accurate for the airframes Germany actually bought and misleading for the specific threat class Kyiv loses its rounds to. Zelenskyy's intervention directs editorial attention from the dollar figure to the export-freeze gap, and from Berlin's procurement mechanism to Washington's licensing decisions. The policy question he has raised is not whether allies will pay; it is whether Washington releases the interceptor class money cannot currently buy.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

One day after signing a €4 billion military deal with Germany, Ukrainian President Zelenskyy told a German TV network that his country's supply of Patriot air defence missiles "could not be any worse." This is not a contradiction. The deal includes Patriot missiles, but a lower-capability type called GEM-T that can shoot down drones and cruise missiles. What Ukraine needs most urgently is a more powerful type, PAC-3 MSE, that can intercept ballistic missiles falling from near-space. The US has suspended exports of those globally. Zelenskyy's statement was a public signal to European audiences that the large headline number does not close the specific gap he is most worried about.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Zelenskyy's public downgrade of the package the day after signing creates diplomatic tension with Berlin; Merz must publicly reconcile the package's limitations without appearing to have oversold it.

  • Risk

    Continued public pressure on the PAC-3 MSE gap may accelerate White House review of the export suspension, or harden it if the administration interprets the statements as public pressure tactics.

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