High costs and long waits for popular US-made Patriots just drove a NATO ally to pick a European rival

High costs and long waits for popular US-made Patriots just drove a NATO ally to pick a European rival

High costs and long waits for popular US-made Patriots just drove a NATO ally to pick a European rival

A Patriot launcher firing an interceptor in a field.
A Patriot launcher fires an interceptor missile during an exercise in New Mexico.US Army photo by Sgt. David Rincon
  • NATO member Denmark said it was choosing the Franco-Italian SAMP-T for long-range air defense.

  • An official said it didn’t pick the US-made Patriot due to the higher price and longer wait time.

  • Demand for Patriots and air defense systems has surged with the West watching China and Russia.

A NATO ally is choosing a European alternative over the popular US-made Patriot air defense system, citing long wait times for the surface-to-air missile system that has seen soaring demand.

Denmark’s defense ministry said last week that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has demonstrated the need for layered air defenses and announced that it intended to procure European-produced systems for long- and medium-range air defense as part of a $9 billion investment.

It’s passing on the MIM-104 Patriot surface-to-air missile battery for long-range defense, instead choosing the Franco-Italian SAMP/T, and picking from among European options for its mid-range needs.

Pugholm Olsen, the head of the Danish defense ministry’s acquisitions body, said the decision was due to the higher price and a longer wait for delivery.

“It is not a rejection of Patriots,” he said. “It’s a selection of what is best.”

He said that “the decision to go with more than one or two suppliers enables shorter delivery times. This means that we can achieve our goal of a comprehensive ground-based air defense capacity as quickly as possible and in this way best support the rapid build-up of Danish combat power.”

Denmark sees air defense systems as an urgent need, with the defense ministry calling their acquisition the country’s biggest-ever single investment in defense. Troels Lund Poulsen, Denmark’s defense minister, called them a “top priority” and said these defenses would be present throughout the country.

The US Army fires a Patriot interceptor missile during a test.
The US Army fires a Patriot interceptor missile during a test.US Army photo

Demand for air defense systems has surged due to their use in recent conflicts and a greater realization of their need in the West amid growing worries about a war against a well-armed peer-level adversary like Russia or China. Patriots have proved extremely successful in Ukraine, even dispelling old doubts about their abilities, and have since become very much in demand.

High demand is good news for manufacturers, but it isn’t without challenges. Defense contractors like Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Boeing, which make the missiles, ground components, and seekers for the Patriot system, are surging production to record levels, but demand outstrips supply, leading to backlogs and long waits.

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