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Ben Shapiro says Trump granting Ukraine license to produce Patriot missiles domestically

Ben Shapiro Show · NATO, Explained: Why It Started and Where It's Going · July 9, 2026
Ben Shapiro says Trump granting Ukraine license to produce Patriot missiles domestically
Ben Shapiro Show
Ben Shapiro Show
NATO, Explained: Why It Started and Where It's Going
"One of the things we're going to be talking about is you'll we're going to give a license to you to make Patriots. That's pretty cool, right? This way, you can't complain that we're not giving them enough. They say, 'Make them yourself.' We haven't informed the company of that yet, but that'll work out all right, you know."
President Trump announced during a meeting with Ukrainian President Zelensky that the U.S. would grant Ukraine licensing to domestically manufacture Patriot missile interceptors. This follows Ukraine's failure to intercept any of 23 Russian ballistic missiles launched last week, with global Patriot inventories under severe strain. The move represents a significant shift in U.S. defense policy allowing allied nations to produce advanced American weapons systems.

About this episode

Ben Shapiro delivers an extended analysis of NATO's historical purpose and current relevance in the context of President Trump's recent diplomatic moves with Ukraine and NATO allies. Shapiro explains that NATO was originally formed in 1949 with three objectives: keep Americans in Europe, keep Russians out, and keep Germans down. He emphasizes that NATO has always been fundamentally an anti-Russian alliance designed to counter Soviet and later Russian territorial expansion. The episode's centerpiece is Trump's meeting with Ukrainian President Zelensky, where the president announced plans to grant Ukraine licensing to domestically manufacture Patriot missile interceptors, a significant shift in U.S. defense policy. Shapiro praises Trump's long-standing position that NATO members must increase their defense spending, arguing the president is correct in demanding reciprocity from European allies. However, Shapiro critiques Trump's warm relations with Turkey, calling the country a nefarious force aligned with terrorist groups including Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, and arguing Turkey functions as a Russian proxy rather than a genuine NATO partner. Shapiro strongly pushes back against what he calls propagandists who claim Russia's interests align with the West, citing Russian imperial ambitions and recent threats against Poland. He concludes by endorsing Trump's vision of expanding NATO's scope beyond European territorial defense to include global threats like Chinese aggression in the Taiwan Strait and Iranian activities in the Strait of Hormuz, arguing that NATO must evolve into a more durable alliance addressing worldwide security challenges or risk irrelevance.

Key takeaways

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