Members of the military wearing ceremonial uniforms walk at the venue next to a NATO logo, on the day of a NATO summit in The Hague, Netherlands June 25, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco

NATO sees positive signs Czech ammunition scheme for Kyiv may continue

· The Straits Times

WIESBADEN, Germany, Dec 19 - A senior NATO military official voiced cautious optimism that the Czech Republic may continue an initiative to source ‍large-calibre ​ammunition for Kyiv from global suppliers despite a ‍recent change of government in Prague.

Before taking office, new Czech Prime Minister Andrej ​Babis pledged ​to cut military aid to Ukraine from the national budget and suggested his government might end the Czech-led ammunition scheme.

He has said ‍the scheme is not transparent and overpriced but has not taken a ​clear stance on the future ⁠of the project, which has strong backing from the president.

"I have no final confirmation (of whether) the initiative continues, but there are some positive signals coming from Prague," Major ​General Maik Keller, deputy commander of NATO's Security Assistance and Training for Ukraine (NSATU), told ‌Reuters at the mission's headquarters in ​Wiesbaden.

"There might be no more Czech funding for the initiative, which there was to a limited extent in the past. But the vast majority of the funding is coming from other partners."

NSATU has been coordinating international military aid for Kyiv for about a year.

Keller praised the Czech initiative ‍for its impact, saying it was delivering 1.8 million rounds of ​artillery ammunition this year - 43% of the total ammunition supplied to Kyiv, and roughly ​70% of the legacy Soviet calibre ammunition.

"So that's ‌quite a significant and important initiative. And that's why we are so keen on continuing it," he ‌said. REUTERS