Germany’s Patriot Offer Accepted by Poland Post Missile Scare

Defence Industry

Warsaw: In the wake of the missile strike on Poland, that country’s Defence Minister Mariusz Błaszczak has announced that he has “received with satisfaction” the offer of his German counterpart, Christine Lambrecht, who said Germany could deploy some of its Patriot launchers to protect its neighbour’s skies.

“I will propose to deploy this system close to the border with Ukraine,” Błaszczak said in a November 21 tweet ahead of his scheduled phone talk with Lambrecht.

Following the conversation, Błaszczak tweeted that “the German Defence Minister has confirmed her willingness to place Patriot launchers near the border” with Ukraine, and that the number of launchers, their variant, and time of delivery, among others, were to be further discussed by both allies.

Lambrecht has also offered to send the country’s Eurofighter Typhoon jets to help secure the Polish airspace.

The latest initiative could further expand Germany’s role in safeguarding the skies of NATO’s eastern flank allies after Berlin deployed its Patriot launchers to Slovakia.

Last March, Germany and the Netherlands sent three batteries of the Patriot system to protect the Slovak territory, and the following month, the United States agreed to deploy an additional battery there. To support Ukraine’s ongoing combat against Russia’s invasion, Bratislava has donated its Soviet-designed S-300 air defence systems to Kyiv, and the Patriot systems filled the resulting capacity gap.

On November 15, a missile strike in Poland’s south-east killed two men after Russia launched its largest string of attacks on Ukrainian cities in more than a month. Poland’s authorities believe that the strike was most likely caused by Ukrainian air defence attempting to intercept a missile fired by the Russian military.

Meanwhile, as Poland is intensifying its efforts to develop mid-range air defence capacities, Błaszczak announced last May that his ministry had requested the US government to sell it six Patriot batteries with related gear. The nation’s first Patriot contract, under which deliveries of two Configuration 3+ batteries to Poland began earlier this year, came with a $4.75 billion price tag.