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Allies to muster more air defence aid for Ukraine as battlefield momentum shifts

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By John Irish

PARIS, July 13 (Reuters) - Western allies ‌will seek to secure more air-defence commitments for Ukraine when they meet in Paris ​on Monday, as shortages have left it increasingly exposed to Russian ballistic missiles, despite recent shifts in momentum on the battlefield

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy will ⁠be joined by at least 25 leaders for a meeting of the Coalition of the Willing, part of broader efforts that include putting together a common position that could be taken to Russia, and security guarantees to support any eventual peace deal.

Monday's ​meeting comes days after a NATO summit that aimed to show transatlantic unity and long-term support for Ukraine.

Russia launched missile and drone attacks on Ukraine ‌on Saturday, killing eight people and wounding dozens more, officials said, as Zelenskiy called for efforts to provide Kyiv with weapons faster.

COALITION SEEKS TO HELP UKRAINE DOWN BALLISTIC MISSILES

"The ballistic missiles launched by (Russian President) Vladimir Putin are deliberately targeting civilian zones and June ⁠was one of the most murderous (months) since the start of the war," Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said ⁠in an interview with Ouest-France newspaper on Sunday.

Russia says it only attacks targets of military relevance and denies targeting civilians.

Briefing reporters, a French presidency official said the focus would be anti-ballistic-missile cooperation ranging from sourcing more U.S. Patriot interceptors and advancing the deployment of the Franco-Italian SAMP-T air defence system to looking at how the European and Ukrainian defence industries can develop alternatives.

One ‌option under consideration was for different European nations to cooperate on a system that would complement SAMP-T and/or Patriot and give ⁠Ukraine a significant role in production.

Ukraine is critically low on munitions for its systems ‌and has been largely unable to down ballistic missiles, which travel at several ​times the speed of sound, over the past month.

It has pleaded with allies for more supplies and has also pushed Europe to work with it on its own anti-ballistic air defence system.

As Russia's strikes have increased, Kyiv has also intensified drone ‌attacks inside Russia, targeting oil facilities and weapons production to undermine Moscow's economic ability ​to press on with its war.

Leaders will also mull ⁠how to crimp Moscow's sources of revenues, notably the "shadow fleet", tankers with opaque ownership structures used to ‌evade oversight to ship Russian oil.

The EU is also set to ⁠adopt a 21st package of sanctions on Russia next week.

French President Emmanuel Macron has promised announcements on Monday, some of them bilateral, potentially concerning joint arms production.

He also said the coalition could announce joint military exercises as it seeks to make the ​concept of a future multinational force in ‌Ukraine (MNFU) more of a practical reality.

"What must be remembered is that the MNFU consists of land, air, sea and training. All of ⁠these pillars are intended to be tested continuously, to varying ​degrees, with all participants in order to guarantee their credibility," the official said.

"It's not a question of conducting exercises ​in Ukraine."

(Reporting by John Irish; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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