MarketList of military aid to Ukraine during the Russo-Ukrainian war
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List of military aid to Ukraine during the Russo-Ukrainian war

Many entities have provided or promised military aid to Ukraine during the Russo-Ukrainian War, particularly since the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. This includes weaponry, equipment, training, logistical support, as well as financial support, unless earmarked for humanitarian purposes. Weapons sent as a result of cooperation between multiple countries are listed separately under each country.

Donors
The donation of military aid was coordinated at monthly meetings in the Ukraine Defense Contact Group throughout the war. A first meeting took place between 41 countries on 26 April 2022, and the coalition comprised 54 countries (all 30 member states of NATO and 24 other countries) at the latest meeting on 14 February 2023. All EU member states collectively donated military aid via EU institutions; all but three (Hungary, Cyprus, and Malta) also donated individually as sovereign countries. As of February 2023, military aid was donated by EU institutions, 45 sovereign countries, companies, and other parties. Sovereign countries European Union Individual EU member states have provided military, financial, and non-lethal material aid since 2014. The following list is the aid collectively provided by the EU. Most of this aid has been coordinated by the European Commission. • Around €17 billion in grants and loans from 2014 until 12 February 2022. • €1.2 billion loan approved 16 February 2022 • €450 million worth of lethal weapons, announced on 27 February 2022, under the European Peace Facility. • €50 million worth of non-lethal aid, announced on 27 February 2022. • Provision of satellite intelligence, notably through the European Union Satellite Centre, as part of 1 March 2022 resolution on the Russian aggression against Ukraine. • Increase of military aid under the European Peace Facility to €1 billion, announced on 23 March 2022. • Military aid increased to €1.5 billion under the European Peace Facility on 13 April 2022, assistance includes personal protective equipment, first aid kits and fuel, as well as military equipment. • Protective gear worth over €977,000 donated to the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine on 8 July 2022. • Ten cars filled with humanitarian aid and 2 prisoner escort vans donated to the State Border Guard Service by EULEX. • An additional €500 million military aid package for Ukraine approved by the EU on 18 July 2022. • Around €500,000 worth of thermal imaging equipment provided by the EU for the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine. • Two trucks and 11 off-road vehicles purchased for the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine through a grant by Frontex. • €225 million in funding for the training of the Ukrainian Armed Forces from the European Peace Facility as part of EUMAM Ukraine. • Training for over 80,000 Ukrainian soldiers by EUMAM. • €200,000 of medical equipment donated to three Ukrainian Border Guard Service Hospitals 8 February 2024. • 12 mine detection dogs supplied to the Armed Forces of Ukraine. • €130,000 worth of equipment including explosive disposal kits, solar powered surveillance cameras, communications equipment and first aid kits donated to the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine 12 September 2024. • 60 4x4 SUVs delivered to the Ukrainian National Guard financed by the Netherlands. • 25 Volkswagen Amarok pick up trucks donated to the National Police of Ukraine co-financed by Germany. • Two trucks and 5 pickup trucks provided to the Ukrainian Border Guard Service April 2025. • €18.1 billion in macro financial assistance as part of the G7 Extraordinary Revenue Acceleration loans initiative to be paid back with interest on frozen Russian assets in 2025. • €6.5 million of EW systems, 4X4s and minibuses for the police and Border Guard, co financed with Germany. • Five mini excavators donated to the Ukrainian Border Guard. Unknown countries • AIFV-B-C25s [August 2023]. • Panthera T-6 APCs (produced in the United Arab Emirates) • 100 BATT UMG APCs (delivered by unknown Eastern European country) • GAIA Amir MRAPs (produced in Israel) • M69A 82 mm mortars (produced by Bosnian company) • BM-21 Grad 122 mm rockets (impounded North Korean shipment delivered by an unknown country) Iranian-smuggled weapons The following list attempts to provide an overview of Iranian-made or Iranian-smuggled weapons in use by the Ukrainian armed forces. They are believed to be intercepted armaments originally supplied by Iran intended for Yemen Houthi rebels. France and the United States had seized these weapons under United Nations Security Council Resolution 2216. The US government announced that it has donated to Ukraine over 1 million rounds of 7.62 mm ammunition, thousands of rocket-propelled grenade proximity fuses and thousands of pounds of propellant for rocket-propelled grenades seized from ships used by Iran through civil forfeiture. The US government is seeking to turn over additional seizures of thousands of rifles, hundreds of machine guns and rocket launchers and dozens of anti-tank guided missiles to Ukraine. Light mortars • 82mm HM-19 (First sighted May 2022) • RPG-7 (April 2024) • Citizens of Taiwan donated $945 million NTD (US$33 million) as of 2 April 2022. • $6,000 worth of AR-15 rifle parts donated by Taiwanese citizens. • South Korean "military geeks" or "밀덕" (mildeok) have been donating their military materiel directly to the Ukrainian Embassy in Seoul including: bulletproof helmets, bulletproof vests, military blankets, hemostatic tourniquets, ammunition pouches, first aid kits, knee and elbow guards, etc. • In addition to private donations, numerous American states and local law enforcement agencies are donating surplus protective equipment through the Ukrainian American Coordinating Council and other organizations. • 101 various firearms and 148,000 rounds of ammunition donated by Miami Police Department from a firearms buyback program to Irpin Police Department August 2023. • "Blue/Yellow" charity in Lithuania, dedicated for supporting Ukraine, collected over €22.9 million (as of 30 March) from the citizens of Lithuania. • On 30 May 2022, Lithuanian citizens raised €5 million for the crowdfunded purchase of a Bayraktar TB2 armed UAV for the Ukrainian military. The drone was subsequently, given to Lithuania by Baykar Tech free of charge, with the €6 million collected used for aid. It reached Ukraine on 8 July 2022. • Lithuanian civilians also crowdfunded 7 Estonian made EOS C VTOl reconnaissance drones (two of which were crowdfunded in early May, with the other five being later purchased with the money collected from the TB2 crowdfunder), 110 Lithuanian-made EDM4S Sky Wiper anti drone weapons, 37 WB Electronics Warmates (including launch/control equipment and ammunition), and 18 UJ-23 Topazs for the Ukrainian military. • "Blue/Yellow" and Lithuanian National Radio and Television raised €8,288,000 to purchase 1,115 sets of laser sights, night vision monoculars and individual anti drones systems for the Ukrainian military. • €5,121,730 raised by Lithuanian National Radio and Television and local companies for ground drones for the Ukrainian military in early 2026. • Citizens of the Czech Republic donated over CZK 4,25 billion ($171 million) as of 24 June 2022. • 1 Bivoj system (3 reconnaissance/attack UAVs + mobile command centre) crowdfunded by Czech Republic citizens and delivered in July 2022. • 15 MR2s Viktor (a Toyota Land Cruiser 70 with a 14.5mm ZU-2 cannon) crowdfunded by Czech citizens (set to be delivered in February 2023). • 1 T-72 Avenger (T-72 upgraded to 3rd gen tank) crowdfunded by citizens in Czech Republic and delivered in October 2022. • 20 tons of plastic explosives, 10,000 detonators and 10 km of detonator cord crowdfunded by Gifts for Putin • 1,000 RPG-75 anti tank weapons crowd funded for the 41st Mechanized Brigade (Ukraine) by Gifts for Putin • A Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter purchased by Ukrainian military intelligence by Gifts for Putin. • The repair of two captured Russian BTR Armoured Personnel Carriers for the Ukrainian military by Gifts for Putin. • 10,000 high capacity rifle magazines for the Ukrainian army crowdfunded by Gifts for Putin. • 100 Mavic 3 pro and 100 Mavic 3T thermal drones crowdfunded for the Ukrainian military by Gifts for Putin. • 11 sets of armoured vests and blankets to the International Legion crowdfunded by Gifts for Putin. • Eight pairs of AGM NVG-50 NL1 night vision devices provided to the 49th Infantry Battalion (Ukraine) by Gifts for Putin. • 1,000 individual first aid kits for the Ukrainian military crowdfunded by Gifts for Putin. • 333 InfraHex thermal camouflage cloaks for Ukrainian special forces crowdfunded by Gifts for Putin. • 80 DARTS loitering munitions for Artan Unit crowdfunded by Gifts for Putin. • Six Baba Yaga bomber drones crowdfunded for the 503rd Marine Battalion and International legion by Gifts for Putin. • Six D-30 howitzers purchased for the Ukrainian military by Gifts for Putin. • 50 ballistic vests for female Ukrainian soldiers purchased through the organization Veteranka by Gifts for Putin. • 500 specialised FPV drones built by STV group crowdfunded for the SBU by Gifts for Putin. • 250 TARS-P interceptor drones crowdfunded by gifts for Putin. • Five Alto NG training planes funded by Gifts for Putin. • Over 500 fibre-optic drones for the Ukrainian military funded by Gifts for Putin. • €5,801,376 raised for artillery shells, rockets and grenade launcher rounds by Gifts for Putin. • €263,517 raised for Czech made camouflage netting for the Ukrainian military by Gifts for Putin. • A FP-5 Flamingo cruise missile funded by Gifts for Putin, funds for second missile matched by manufacturer. • By 24 July 2022, a Polish crowdfunding campaign on the crowdfunding website Zrzutka raised over Zł 23,035,000 to purchase a Baykar Bayraktar TB2 for the Ukrainian military, the drone was subsequently given to Poland by Baykar Tech free of charge, with the €5 million collected used for aid. • Revolver 860 Armed VTOL unmanned aerial vehicle [March, April or May 2022] (A few sold to Polish company. Subsequently transferred to Ukraine). • 80 military quadbikes fundraised by Latvian citizens. • The Estonian Voluntary Rescue Association donated a MV-4 robotic mine clearing vehicle to Ukraine on 29 August 2023. • The Latvian group SOS palīdzība Ukrainai purchased and donated four Bandvagn 202 all terrain armoured vehicles to the Ukrainian military. • Hampshire and Isle of Wight Air Ambulance has donated medical supplies worth up to £5,000 to the Ukrainian military. • One Mi-2 АМ-1 medevac helicopter provided to the Main Directorate of Intelligence by the Polish group Zbroimy Ukrainę. • A converted mobile dentist office vehicle donated by residents of Åland to the Ukrainian Border Guard Service Steel Border Brigade June 2024. An ambulance, a truck, a car, two boats, a trailer and heating equipment were donated November 2024. • 50 Latvian made drones crowdfunded by the Latvian public media campaign "In Thoughts and Deeds with Ukraine August 2024. • One Steyr-Puch Pinzgauer 6x6 armoured vehicles donated to the 46th Airmobile Brigade by Motorsport UK. • 23 ambulances donated to the Ukrainian military by the New Zealand charity KIWI K.A.R.E. • 4,320 ballistic vests, 1,580 helmets, seven 50-bed field hospitals donated by The California National Guard June 2022. • 10,000 CAT Generation 7 tourniquets donated by the German Federal Police to Ukrainian State Border Guard Service troops. • A Liebherr LTM mobile telescoping crane donated by German Federal Police to Ukrainian State Border Guard troops. • 15 Liebherr truck mounted cranes, 2 tracked mulcher vehicles, hundreds of search lights and tens of thousands of engineering tools to Ukrainian State Border Guard engineering units by the German Federal Police. • Five Ford transit vans, a speedboat and a Vector reconnaissance drone provided to the 10th Mobile Border Detachment by German Federal Police. • 27,017 FPV drones funded for the Ukrainian Armed Forces by the Czech group Drony Nemesis. • 10 Hazard loitering munitions, a control station and a HMMVW donated to the GRU by the American group Help Heroes of Ukraine. • 11 vehicles, consisting of snowmobiles, motorbikes and all terrain vehicles donated to Ukrainian Border Guards by Latvian, Polish and Austrian volunteers. • 100 FPV drones donated to the Ukrainian army and police by the Latvian charity foundation Ziedot.lv • 11 vehicles including an armoured Land Rover, trucks and ambulances donated to the Ukrainian military by the British group Driving Ukraine. • $2 million donated by Reed Hastings to the charity White Stork to provide Ukrainian combat medics with drone jammers and other aid. • Six cars and two minibuses donated to the Ukrainian military by Prague City Hall via the non-profit organization Neohnutí. • €397,169 crowd funded by Czech and Slovak volunteers to purchase 254 122mm artillery shells from the Slovak arms manufacturer MSM group for the Ukrainian military. • Four buses, three ambulances an SUV, a generator, defibrillators, turnstiles and medical equipment donated to Ukrainian State Border Guard Service by Santa Clara Monastery Foundation. • 500 tons of improvised anti drone netting delivered by to the Ukrainian military by Danish volunteers. • Tactical medicine courses provided to Border Guard, National Guard and TDF units in Volyn Oblast provided by the Finnish organisation Lion Defence Team. • Night vision equipment, tablets, 120 FPV drones and a Hummer SUV donated to the GRU by the Latvian group Atbalsta Biedrība. • €240,004 raised by LSM to provide Latvian made night vision equipment, food, uniforms and other aid to Ukrainian soldiers. • A Yak-52 aircraft donated to the Ukrainian army for air defence by the Dutch group Protect Ukraine. • 700 shotguns with 130 red dot sights and 20,000 cartridges donated to Ukrainian military intelligence by an anonymous Dutch citizen. • Over 1,400 logistical and medical vehicles delivered to the Ukrainian Armed Forces by the Swedish aid group Blågula Bilen. • Provision of sample parts for Soviet era armoured vehicles provided by The Tank Museum to a British firm supplying Ukraine to reverse engineer. == See also ==
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