Sweden, Estonia, and Finland pledge to increase spending on weapons purchases from US – Europe live | Nato

Countries pledge to increase defence spending on Ukraine

Sweden, Estonia, and Finland pledged contributions on Wednesday to increase spending on purchases of US weapons for Ukraine, but countries including Spain, Italy, France, and Britain have faced criticism for holding back, Reuters reports.

US defence secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday urged allies to ramp up investment in the Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List (PURL) program, which replaced US arms donations to Ukraine and now requires allies to pay for US weapons deliveries.

He told reporters before a meeting at the alliance’s headquarters in Brussels:

You get peace when you are strong. Not when you use strong words or wag your fingers, you get it when you have strong and real capabilities that adversaries respect.

Our expectation today is that more countries donate even more, that they purchase even more to provide for Ukraine, to bring that conflict to a peaceful conclusion.

US defence secretary Pete Hegseth attends the meeting of Nato Ministers of Defence at Nato Headquarters in Brussels, Belgium on 15 October 2025.
US defence secretary Pete Hegseth attends the meeting of Nato Ministers of Defence at Nato Headquarters in Brussels, Belgium on 15 October 2025. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Nato Secretary-General Mark Rutte said he expected further pledges, noting that $2bn already had been committed through the mechanism.

However, this amount falls short of the $3.5bn Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy had hoped to secure by October.

The Kiel Institute for the World Economy reported on Tuesday that military aid to Ukraine fell by 43% in July and August compared with the first half of the year.

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Key events

Russian forces have added a key upgrade to their drone fleet since the summer, according to Serhii Beskrestnov, a Ukrainian military and drone expert whose team studies intercepted Russian drones, the Associated Press (AP) reports.

Cameras and radio modems, which send and receive data wirelessly, have been fitted to various types of long-range strike drones. That allows operators to adjust a drone’s flight path in real time, sharply increasing precision compared to preprogrammed models.

Beskrestnov said locomotives are particularly vulnerable to the new technology, because they are relatively slow and follow predictable routes.

If the Russians keep hitting diesel and electric locomotives, the time will come very soon when the track will still be intact – but we’ll have nothing left to run on it.

The modified drones can fly up to 200km into Ukrainian territory while streaming video back to operators in Russian-held areas, Beskrestnov said.

An official at Ukraine’s defence ministry, speaking on condition of anonymity to AP, said Ukrainian forces also have recovered and examined a Geran-type drone fitted with a civilian camera and radio modem. The Geran is a Russian variant of the Iranian-designed Shahed.

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