
VIENNA — The chief executive of Rheinmetall, Europe’s highest-valued defense company, continues to face criticism after dismissing Ukraine’s drone industry as the work of “housewives” with “3D printers in their kitchens” − comments his own company quickly walked back. Now, German media report the Bundeswehr’s flagship Rheinmetall counter-drone system is running at least 16 months behind schedule, adding further troubles for the defense giant.
Armin Papperger made the remarks on Ukraine in an interview with The Atlantic, published March 27, conducted at Rheinmetall’s Unterlüß factory. Discussing Ukrainian drone manufacturers − including companies such as Fire Point and Skyfall, named by the interviewer − Papperger said the producers were “Ukrainian housewives” and described the work as “playing with Lego.”
“This is not the technology of Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics or Rheinmetall,” he said.
The backlash was swift and came from multiple directions. Within 48 hours, Rheinmetall’s own corporate communications published a statement saying the company “deeply respects the enormous efforts of the Ukrainian people in self-defense against Russian aggression” and called the Ukrainian “innovative strength and fighting spirit” a “source of inspiration.”
Papperger has been the company’s CEO since 2013.

Rheinmetall runs multiple joint ventures in Ukraine and has staked much of its rearmament narrative on being a trusted partner of Kyiv.
The Ukrainian drone industry, while heavily reliant on Chinese components, has developed battlefield capabilities, from one-way attack FPVs to long-range strike drones, that have demonstrably shaped the course of the war in ways no Western prime contractor has replicated at comparable speed or cost.
In October, Papperger had already called into question the importance of drones in the war in Ukraine, telling Handelsblatt, a German business publication, that modern wars are still fought primarily with tanks and missiles. “There are a lot of these narratives circulating right now that claim future wars will be fought exclusively with drones. I think that’s nonsense,” he was quoted as saying.
The timing of his latest remarks collided with unflattering news on Rheinmetall’s home turf. According to German news magazine Stern, reporting on March 31 based on sources in Bundeswehr and parliamentary circles, the Defense Ministry expects delivery of the first serial Skyranger 30 systems with a delay of at least 16 months. That pushes initial deliveries to 2027 at the earliest. The fully developed version would not reach the Bundeswehr until 2029, according to Stern.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Blue Origin launches New Glenn rocket on company's first NASA-scale science mission - 2
How to watch the last supermoon of the year - 3
Creative Tech Contraptions That Will Work on Your Life - 4
4 Home Rec center Hardware Decisions for Little Spaces - 5
The most effective method to Help a Friend or family member Determined to have Cellular breakdown in the lungs
They died 'doing what they loved': The stories of workers in their 80s who died on the job
Cells have more mini ‘organs’ than researchers thought − unbound by membranes, these rogue organelles challenge biology’s fundamentals
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS reveals weird wobbling jets in rare sun-facing tail
IDF destroys regime's missile, sea mine production site in Yazd amid nationwide airstrikes
Artemis II astronauts arrive in Florida to prepare for launch to the moon
Bird flu poses risk of pandemic worse than COVID, France's Institut Pasteur says
December’s full moon is the last supermoon of the year. Here’s what to know
Amid growing bipartisan scrutiny of Pete Hegseth, Trump says he 'wouldn't have wanted … a second strike' on alleged Venezuelan drug boat survivors
If someone's always late, is it time blindness, or are they just being rude?













