(Reuters) – Sweden has signed a letter of intent to export up to 150 of its domestically produced Gripen fighter jets to Ukraine, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said on Wednesday after meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
The two leaders met for talks in Linkoping in southern Sweden and visited Saab (SAABb.ST), opens new tab, which is the maker of the JAS 39 Gripen fighter, the GlobalEye surveillance aircraft, missile systems, anti-tank infantry weapons and other equipment.
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Kristersson told a news conference the two countries had signed a long-term cooperation agreement over air defences that included the possibility of exporting 100-150 newly produced Gripen E fighter jets.
“We fully realise it’s a long road ahead of us,” Kristersson said with a Gripen in Swedish livery in the background.
“But from today we are committed to exploring all the possibilities in providing Ukraine with a large amount of Gripen fighters in the future.”
The possibility of supplying Gripens to Ukraine has been under consideration over the past two years but was put on hold to allow Kyiv to focus on the introduction of American-made F-16 fighters that it began deploying last August.
“We have started the work to obtain Gripens to Ukraine and expect the future contract to allow us to acquire no less than 100 such jets,” Zelenskiy said, speaking through a translator.
Ukrainian pilots have been in Sweden to test the Gripen and help smooth any eventual export of the jets, a rugged and relatively low-cost option compared to aircraft such as the U.S. F-35.
The Gripen has been in commission since 1996 and Saab has produced around 280 of the planes in total.
Sweden has ordered 60 of the latest Gripen E model and Saab is increasing capacity in Linkoping, aiming to be able to produce 20-30 planes per year at the plant in a couple of years. Saab is also building Gripens in Brazil.
Before arriving in Linkoping, Zelenskiy briefly touched down in Oslo where the Norwegian government announced it was donating another 1.5 billion Norwegian crowns ($149.4 million) to Ukraine for the purchase of natural gas to secure electricity and heating.