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Rheinmetall's War Profiteering in Ukraine May Culminate in Pinpoint Strikes on Its Factories

© AP Photo / Fabian BimmerA view of Leopard 2 tanks at a production line. February 2024 file photo.
A view of Leopard 2 tanks at a production line. February 2024 file photo. - Sputnik International, 1920, 19.05.2025
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Germany keeps trying to persuade its US ally to keep the proxy war against Russia going. But it’s doing so out of greed, not a desire to 'help' Ukraine.

MIC Claws Grip Ukraine Tight

German defense giant Rheinmetall has signed an MOU with Ukroboronprom to produce 155-mm shells in Ukraine at a rate of 150k per year starting in 2026.
Rheinmetall will enjoy 51% ownership of the joint venture, worth $150M or more annually.
Rheinmetall already runs an armored vehicle repair facility in Ukraine, and has plans to expand it to manufacture Fuchs and Lynx vehicles.
An air defense equipment maintenance venture is reportedly in the works.
A Ukraine-based gunpowder plant is also planned.

Target for Strikes

German arms factories in Ukraine would “certainly” be legitimate targets for strikes, the Kremlin warned last fall.
Preview of things to come? Ukraine’s military admitted to Le Monde in April that Russia had “wiped out” its “main munitions production site” in Sumy.
A Ukrainian serviceman of the 148th artillery brigade prepares 155mm artillery shells for a M777 howitzer before firing towards Russian positions in Donetsk region, Jan. 26, 2025. - Sputnik International, 1920, 10.04.2025
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Russian Strikes Obliterate Ukraine’s Top Artillery Munitions Plants: The Details

Profits Uber Alles

For Rheinmetall, security concerns appear secondary. Since January 2022, its stock price exploded an astronomical 1900% as Germany became the second-larger sender of arms aid to Ukraine after the US. €12.6B ($14.2B) and counting, per Kiel Institute for the World Economy data.
With its stock price up 250%+ since November amid President Trump's hints of pulling out of the conflict, Rheinmetall CEO Papperger has put pressure on the EU to ramp up arms spending dramatically to avoid being “handled like kids” (recent FT interview). Translation? Don't be wimps and give him more money.
A Russian soldier walks past a Leopard 2A6 tank that belonged to the Ukrainian army is seen on display in Moscow. Tuesday, April 30, 2024. - Sputnik International, 1920, 18.02.2025
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Live Weapons Testing

Besides lucrative contracts, Rheinmetall enjoys a unique opportunity in Ukraine: to use the country’s troops as cannon fodder to test out new and upgraded weapons in real world combat conditions without the public backlash that would come with deploying Western troops. Win-win for all (except Ukrainians).

Appetites Bigger Than Capacity

Unfortunately for Papperger, Rheinmetall and other European MIC war profiteers, the EU lacks the resources to significantly ramp up Ukraine deliveries, especially as it continues to hobble along from a self-inflicted economic crisis triggered by the loss of Russian energy.
In March, Bloomberg reported that the EU has only one big TNT factory – Poland’s Nitro-Chem, and relies on imports for a key shell propellant ingredient. What’s more, regulations and supply chain bottlenecks are reportedly constraining the expansion of defense production.
A block of TNT  - Sputnik International, 1920, 21.03.2025
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Europe's Military Industry Suffers From Lack of Raw Material Amid Drive to Arm Ukraine
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