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NATO Agrees Multi‑Year Ukraine Package as Ankara Summit Exposes U.S. Unpredictability

The communiqué commits multi‑year aid to Ukraine, with remaining questions on financing, timelines and U.S. reliability that leave implementation uncertain.

Overview

  • NATO leaders adopted a summit communiqué on July 8 that pledges roughly €70 billion for Ukraine in 2026 and about €140 billion through 2027 for equipment, support and training.
  • The alliance announced more than $50 billion in new defence procurements and a cited €27 billion fuel and infrastructure initiative to boost supply chains and readiness across Europe.
  • President Trump told Volodymyr Zelenskyy he intends to give Ukraine a licence to produce Patriot air‑defence missiles, an offer that raises unresolved questions about funding, technical transfer, production time and target vulnerability.
  • Trump combined headline‑grabbing public provocations and gaffes during the summit with reports of a calmer, more conciliatory tone behind closed doors, creating both diplomatic strain and private reassurance for allies.
  • European leaders used the meeting to press a shift in burden‑sharing and build domestic defence industries, but many announced measures depend on further national budget decisions and detailed industrial coordination to take effect.