Sweden announces $102 million in financial, military aid to Ukraine
Sweden will provide Ukraine with an anti-ship missile system Robot 17, 5,000 anti-tank launchers, and AG 90 heavy sniper rifles and ammunition.
Sweden on Thursday announced additional aid of one billion kronor ($102 million, 95 million euros) to Ukraine, consisting of both financial aid and military equipment including anti-ship missiles and anti-tank launchers.
"We are now seeing a new phase in the Russian invasion, where (Russia) is gathering strength in eastern and southeastern Ukraine and the Ukrainian side has requested help in several areas," Swedish Defence Minister Peter Hultqvist said at a joint press conference with Finance Minister Mikael Damberg.
Damberg indicated that his country would contribute 578 million kronor to the Ukrainian central bank's fund for its armed forces, 60 million kronor to NATO's fund to support Ukraine's armed forces, and military equipment worth 262 million kronor.
The military aid consists of Sweden's anti-ship missile system Robot 17, which is a modified version of the US Hellfire missile system, as well as 5,000 anti-tank launchers and AG 90 heavy sniper rifles and ammunition.
"This is qualified equipment in line with what Ukraine has requested," Hultqvist said.
In late February, Sweden broke its doctrine of not providing weapons to countries in active conflict for the first time since 1939, announcing 400 million kronor worth of military aid and the donation of 500 million kronor to the Ukrainian central bank's fund for its armed forces.
In May, Sweden, along with neighboring Finland, overturned decades of military non-alignment by submitting historic joint applications to join NATO following the war in Ukraine.