Romanian Parliament to debate Patriot system donation to Ukraine in autumn session

Romania prepares to donate Patriot missile system to Ukraine, submitting legislative proposal to Parliament, as the Romania Defense Ministry concludes replacement negotiations with US.

Aug 30, 2024 - 22:00
Romanian Parliament to debate Patriot system donation to Ukraine in autumn session

Patriot air defense system, illustrative image. Photo via Eastnews.ua.

Romania’s Ministry of National Defense has submitted a bill to Parliament for debate and vote in the upcoming autumn session on transferring the Patriot surface-to-air missile system to Ukraine, RFE/RL’s Romanian Service reports. The session will start on 2 September 2024.

Russia carries out daily air attacks on Ukraine, usually with 10-30 Shahed drones and several missiles targeting civilian and military sites. Occasionally, it launches dozens of missiles and drones to overwhelm air defenses, targeting the power grid. Earlier this summer, President Zelenskyy said Ukraine needs 25 Patriot systems to protect the skies and at least 7 to secure key urban areas. Patriot is Ukraine’s only system capable of intercepting Russian ballistic missiles.

The proposed legislation outlines the donation of one of Romania’s seven Patriot systems in the 3+ configuration to Ukraine. Configuration 3+ is reportedly the most modern variant of the system and is used by the US and nearly 20 other allies.

Of seven 3+ configuration Patriots Romania purchased from the US, four systems have already arrived in Romania, with two being operational. The remaining three are expected to arrive in the immediate future.

According to the Ministry of National Defense,

“The finalization of the donation act will contribute to accentuating Romania’s position as a regional security provider and to strengthening the partnership relationship with the United States of America.”

The Patriot Configuration 3+ features high-performance radar systems and advanced PAC-3 aerial interceptor missiles, capable of striking ballistic missiles at distances of up to 20 kilometers. Each battery contains four PAC-3 missiles, an improvement over the previous PAC-2 version which contained only one.

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