Ukraine signed a defense cooperation agreement in the Drone Deal format with Estonia and the Netherlands, while also advancing preparations for similar agreements with Canada and Finland. 

The deal was signed during a meeting between President Volodymyr Zelensky and Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, on Tuesday, July 7. Zelensky signed a similar agreement with Dutch Prime Minister Rob Jetten, which he described as a “full-fledged” cooperation deal covering joint drone production, technology development, and systematic arms exports. 

“There will be even more opportunities for joint production and technology development, and most importantly, for systematic exchange of expertise and arms exports,” Zelensky said, adding that the leaders also discussed the need for Europe to develop its own anti-ballistic missiles.

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He thanked the Netherlands for assistance he said has helped protect “thousands upon thousands” of Ukrainian lives from Russian strikes, and Estonia for its military, humanitarian, and diplomatic support toward EU and NATO membership.

Canada drone deal still in preparation

Separately, Zelensky met with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Finnish President Alexander Stubb, where both sides discussed timelines and terms for their own Drone Deal agreements. 

Canada unveiled a $900 million medium-term military package for Ukraine during the same NATO summit in Ankara, covering vehicles, munitions, and continued air defense support. 

Confident Zelensky Arrives at NATO Summit After Ukraine Regains Momentum
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Confident Zelensky Arrives at NATO Summit After Ukraine Regains Momentum

Ukraine's long-range strikes, new European funding, and Russia's growing domestic challenges have improved Kyiv's position ahead of the NATO summit in Ankara.

Zelensky described the drone agreement as covering not just drone production, but a broader system of security capabilities tested during the war. “At the meeting with Mark, we also discussed the current diplomatic situation,” Zelensky said, adding that  he “shared ideas on how to bring peace closer and create genuine interest in Russia for negotiations.”

Canada has also invited Ukraine to become a founding state of a new bank for defense, security, and resilience, which will work on attracting capital and developing defense-industrial potential and technologies proven in real combat conditions.

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Finland negotiations continue

“As always, many details and coordination between us,” Zelensky said about his meeting with Stubb, where they discussed a bilateral Drone Deal, including potential signing dates.

According to Zelensky, the talks covered Ukraine’s air defense needs and coordination on joint diplomatic and defense steps, with Stubb sharing details of his communications with other countries relevant to ending the war.

Both leaders agreed to continue working closely together to secure outcomes needed by both Ukraine and Europe.

NATO summit in Ankara sets backdrop for talks

Zelensky’s diplomatic push with Estonia, the Netherlands, Canada and Finland unfolded on the sidelines of the NATO summit, where the president arrived in a notably stronger position than a year ago, according to Bloomberg.

The outlet credited the shift to Ukraine’s intensified strikes on Russian oil refineries and logistics, growing European financial backing, and mounting pressure on the Kremlin.

“There is no major Russian oil refinery left that has not been struck by Ukraine,” Zelensky told NATO leaders during the summit.

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NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte reinforced that assessment, telling reporters that Ukraine is “changing the dynamics on the battlefield.”

He also dismissed Russia’s latest missile strikes as a sign of weakness rather than strength, saying, “I think the message last night again was of how desperate Putin is,” while pressing allies to accelerate air defense support to Kyiv. 

The summit is expected to focus on NATO defense spending and a proposed €70 billion ($80 billion) package of weapons, training, and military assistance for Ukraine in 2026, with “at least equivalent levels” of support pledged for 2027.

Despite Ukraine’s improved standing, Russia continues to claim gradual territorial gains in the east, and Kyiv still faces critical shortages of Patriot interceptors amid ongoing Russian ballistic missile attacks.

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