"There is still ammunition in stock in Europe," Frederiksen said. "This is not only a question about production, because we have weapons, we have ammunition, we have air defense [systems] that we don't have to use ourself at the moment, that we should deliver to Ukraine."
Kyiv's presidential office said on Saturday that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had met with Frederiksen, and thanked the Danish leader for the more than dozen packages of defense assistance Copenhagen had committed to the embattled nation.
The two leaders "paid special attention to further defense support for our country, bilateral cooperation and cooperation with other countries to provide Ukraine with the necessary weapons," Kyiv said.
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"Ukraine needs ammunition and the necessary equipment to defend its freedom," Czech President Petr Pavel added during the Munich conference. "We must encourage investment in the European defense industry and increase its capacity," he said.
Zelensky, also in Munich, said Ukrainian operations were only limited by its access to weaponry and ammunition.
"Keeping Ukraine in an artificial deficit of weapons, particularly in deficit of artillery and long-range capabilities, allows [Russian President Vladimir] Putin to adapt to the current intensity of the war," Zelensky said in an address."