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US in talks on Europe missile co-production, source says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 7, 2026 | 1:52 AM

By Sabine Siebold

ANKARA, July 7 (Reuters) – The U.S. is in talks with Germany and other European nations about establishing co-production of Raytheon’s AIM-120 ​AMRAAM missiles and a maintenance facility for Lockheed’s ‌PAC-3 Patriot missiles in Europe, a source told Reuters.

If implemented, both projects could free up capacity at Raytheon and Lockheed Martin factories in the United States and enable the U.S. ‌defence ​giants to ramp up production at ⁠home.

The countries will sign ⁠a statement of intent at a NATO Industry Forum on the sidelines of the military alliance’s Ankara summit later on Tuesday, said the source, who ​spoke on condition of anonymity.

Both PAC-3 missiles for Patriot air defence units and AIM-120C-8 missiles, launched by ⁠NASAMS air defence systems as ⁠well as by F-16 fighter jets, ​are in high demand in Ukraine where Kyiv has been ​fighting off Russian attacks since Moscow’s full-scale invasion ‌in 2022.

U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly criticised European allies for relying on the U.S. for their security, while pressing them to boost defence spending and ⁠buy more U.S. equipment. He has also threatened at times to pull Washington out of NATO.

In mid-June, Trump invoked the ⁠Defense Production ‌Act to address constraints in weapons supply ⁠and development for munitions production and ​supply chains.

The ‌move followed growing concern in Washington ​about the ⁠capacity of U.S. weapons manufacturers to meet demand, as both the war on Iran and the war in Ukraine have depleted U.S. arms stocks.

Trump has also encouraged co-production of U.S. weapons with Europe.

(Reporting by Sabine SieboldEditing ​by Linda Pasquini)