Zelenskyy in Bucharest: Ukraine and Romania ink drone production and strategic energy pact

As Russian drones litter Romanian skies during assaults on Odesa, this alliance hardens the Black Sea flank, a pragmatic counter to Moscow's hybrid threats

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Zelenskyy and Dan at a press briefing in Bucharest

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy landed in Bucharest on March 12 for a high-stakes summit with Romanian President Nicușor Dan, elevating bilateral ties to a formal strategic partnership. The leaders inked a trio of landmark deals spanning defense, energy and infrastructure, with joint production of drones and defense gear in Romania emerging as the headline.

Talks zeroed in on harnessing Ukraine’s battle-hardened drone expertise for co-manufacturing on Romanian soil, integrating Kyiv’s software into Bucharest‘s defense ecosystem. Zelenskyy highlighted the urgency, noting U.S. and over 10 European/Middle Eastern nations already seeking Ukraine’s intercept tech amid escalating threats.

Energy lifeline: Power lines, LNG and Black Sea plays

Energy security took center stage, with agreements for two new cross-border power interconnectors, one slated online by year-end to shield Ukraine’s border regions like Chernivtsi from Russian strikes. Plans also cover Black Sea shelf extraction, routing U.S. LNG through Romania and building a shared grid to balance deficits and surpluses.

Romania recommitted to Kyiv’s air defense, F-16 pilot training at local bases and unblocking EU aid, while pledging diplomatic muscle in NATO and Brussels. Zelenskyy and Dan toured a key training center, where Ukrainian aviators hone Western jets.

The partnership declaration seals mutual trust for regional stability, from minority rights to trade. For Romania, it’s a NATO frontline bulwark; for Ukraine, industrial muscle and energy resilience en route to EU membership.