
Almost all military aid to Ukraine currently comes from the EU and other European countries—about 99% of the total. This was emphasized by German Ambassador to Ukraine Heiko Thoms during a discussion at the Kyiv Security Forum’s new event format, “Kyiv Security Forum: Deep Strike.”
“We either provide Ukraine with financial assistance so that your Armed Forces can become stronger, or we supply European defense equipment. And in those areas where we lack the necessary capabilities, we procure them for you,” he noted.
Thoms stressed that Europe is significantly ramping up its own defense efforts; Germany alone, for instance, is tripling its defense budget between 2022 and 2030.
“The European Union may sometimes seem a bit slow, but what we have already achieved to date is truly impressive. For 2026-2027 alone, we have approved 60 billion euros in military aid for Ukraine. We have defense industry programs, the European Defense Fund, the SAFE defense loan program, and the European Peace Fund – a powerful tool for strengthening European defense and providing assistance to others,” the ambassador added.
Apart from that, the diplomat commented on Russia’s strike on the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra. “Just a few days before the attack, I visited Lavra during a tour and was in the very spot that was later hit. It is absolutely clear to me that this was a targeted strike. It was a deliberate attack on Ukrainian identity, sovereignty, and independence,” Thoms stated.
He emphasized that Ukraine currently holds a technological advantage on the battlefield. “Ukraine is very successfully holding the front line, while also achieving significant successes in what we call strikes against the enemy’s rear facilities. Russian logistics routes are coming under increasingly effective strikes,” the ambassador emphasized.
The discussion took place in a new format of the Kyiv Security Forum, “Kyiv Security Forum: Deep Strike,” with the participation of Kyiv Security Forum Chairman Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who served as Prime Minister of Ukraine from 2014 to 2016; Kyiv Security Forum Security Council member Danylo Lubkivsky, who served as Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine in 2014; German Ambassador to Ukraine Heiko Thoms; and French Ambassador to Ukraine Gaël Veyssière.








