Russian President Vladimir Putin says he’s very confident that Moscow will destroy the Patriot air defense systems that the United States has promised to Ukraine in a new security assistance package.
A day after the U.S. State Department announced a new $1.85 billion aid package for Ukraine, bringing the overall financial support to about $22 billion, Putin said “the Patriot is a fairly outdated system” and an “antidote” to these systems will be found.
“It is said that the Patriot systems may be sent to Ukraine. Let them do it; we will weed out the Patriots too,” Putin said, according to the Kremlin station.
“We are ready to negotiate with everyone involved about acceptable solutions, but that is up to them—we are not the ones refusing to negotiate, they are,” Putin told the station.
However, there is little end in sight to the war as Moscow vows it will fight until all its aims are achieved while Kyiv says it will not rest until every Russian soldier is ejected from all of its territories, including Crimea which Russia annexed in 2014.
Russian missile strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure have recently increased, depriving citizens of heat and other resources during the harsh winter months.
Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with President Joe Biden last week at the White House, leaving his nation for the first known time since Russia began its invasion of Ukraine in late February.
What Is the Patriot?
The Patriot, which stands for Phased Array Tracking Radar for Intercept on Target, is a theater-wide surface-to-air missile defense system built by Raytheon Technologies Corp. and considered one of the most advanced air defense systems in the U.S. military’s arsenal.The system was first used in combat during the 1991 Gulf War, with batteries protecting Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Israel, and later used during the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.
It’s a mobile system that usually includes powerful radar, a control station, a power generator, launch stations, and other support vehicles.
The system has different capabilities depending on the type of interceptor used.
The PAC-2 interceptor uses a blast-fragmentation warhead, while the newer PAC-3 missile uses more advanced hit-to-kill technology.
The system’s radar has a range of more than 150 km (93 miles), the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) said in 2015.
A newly produced single Patriot battery costs over $1 billion, with $400 million for the system and $690 million for the missiles in a battery, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank.