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Ukraine launches joint venture with German arms maker Rheinmetall - PM

Logo of Rheinmetall AG is seen in Zurich

By Olena Harmash and Pavel Polityuk

KYIV (Reuters) -Ukraine has set up a joint defence venture with German arms manufacturer Rheinmetall AG to service and repair Western weapons sent to help Kyiv against Russia's full-scale invasion, officials said on Tuesday.

Announced by Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal at a German-Ukrainian Business Forum in Berlin, the venture will also help with the localisation of some key equipment produced by Rheinmetall AG, he said.

It will bring "cooperation between our countries to a qualitatively new level and will allow us to build together the arsenal of the free world," Shmyhal told the forum.

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Ukraine relies heavily on financial and military support from the West which has poured in tens of billions of dollars of weapons since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022. Germany is a key ally.

Oleksander Kamyshyn, minister for strategic industries, said Ukraine was committed to launching the production of Western weapons locally to keep up with growing Ukrainian demand with the war now at the 20-month mark with no end in sight.

He said he met 25 major German defence producers in Berlin.

Ukrainian officials hope cooperation with Western arms producers can help revive a domestic arms industry plagued by inefficiency and lack of transparency for years before Russia's invasion in February 2022.

Kyiv also wants to try to reduce its reliance on Western aid, create an additional boost for the economy and speed up ammunition supplies to the front to support its counteroffensive against a bigger Russian army.

Ukraine launched the counteroffensive in early June to try to recapture territory occupied by Russia but five months in its troops face a fierce Russian attack on the eastern front line near Avdiivka in Donetsk region and Kupiansk in Kharkiv region.

General Serhiy Naev, commander of the Joint Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, praised the efficiency and precision of Western weapons, saying they provided a sense of certainty on the battlefield.

"Western weapons are very technological," Naev said in a video posted on the Telegram messaging app.

Rheinmetall said in a statement it owned a 51% stake in the venture that would operate on Ukrainian territory.

"The first project will be repairing of German equipment, tanks, heavy armoured vehicles, Panzerhaubitzers and other German equipment," Shmyhal told reporters in Berlin.

"All other production projects - it's not public information, but we have some plans what to produce in Ukraine, but the companies will announce it by themselves when the time will come."

(Additional reporting by Thomas Escritt; Writing by Tom Balmforth; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Jonathan Oatis)