“We have also reached an agreement with partners from some countries — I won’t specify names now — to expand Ukraine’s access to intelligence, relevant technology, and satellites operated by our European colleagues,” Zelenskyy said at a press briefing, quoted by state news agency Ukrinform.
He added that Kyiv also secured agreements with several key players to access their ammunition depots.
“We have agreed on licenses for the production of air defense systems, and we will work on licenses for certain types of artillery [ammunition],” he said.
At the summit on March 27 in Paris, officials of 31 countries, along with the president of the European Commission and NATO’s secretary general, gathered to discuss plans to guarantee Ukraine’s post-war security.