Ukraine and Belgium inked a bilateral security pact, with Belgium committing €977 million in military aid and 30 F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo signed a bilateral security and long-term support deal on Tuesday, including an agreement to send Kyiv €977 million in Belgian military aid this year.
“This will ensure Belgium’s commitment to providing our country with support over the course of the agreement’s ten-year term,” Zelenskyy said in a post on X on Tuesday.
“For the first time, such an agreement specifies the exact number of F-16 fighter jets — 30 — that will be delivered to Ukraine until 2028, with the first arriving already this year,” he added.
According to Zelenskyy, the agreement guarantees Belgium’s timely security assistance, modern armoured vehicles, equipment to meet Ukraine’s air force and air defence needs, naval security, mine clearance, participation in the artillery ammunition coalition, and military training.
The deal also includes plans for defence industry cooperation, backing Ukraine’s Peace Formula, and reinforcing sanctions against Russia, among other provisions.
Belgian Prime Minister De Croo said Zelenskyy required “the right tools to protect his citizens.”
“We are very determined when it comes to our support,” he wrote in a post on X, “so we need to do more, better and faster.”
Zelenskyy was in the Belgian capital to shore up Western support for the war-battered Ukraine. He is also scheduled to visit a military airbase in the Belgian capital, where he will meet instructors helping to train Ukrainian pilots to fly US-made jets.
Belgium has pledged to supply fighter aircraft to Kyiv as part of a broader initiative by European allies and hopes to begin deliveries this year.
Zelenskyy’s Belgium visit comes a day after he travelled to Spain and successfully secured a Spanish pledge of additional air defence missiles. This will help fend off roughly 3,000 rockets and drones Russia fires at the country every month.
Despite the win, the Ukrainian leader said he still needs US-made Patriot air defences to counter Kremlin attacks on the heavily-hit power grid and civilian areas.
“If we had these modern Patriot systems, (Russian) airplanes wouldn’t be able to fly close enough to drop the bombs on the civilian population and the military,” Zelenskyy said at a news conference in the Spanish capital.