Estonia's foreign minister has called on other European countries to double their defense expenditure because of the war in Ukraine.

Iran PressEurope: Urmas Reinsalu made his comments on Monday in an interview during a visit to Kyiv with six other foreign ministers from the Nordic and Baltic regions: Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden.

The trip was intended to show support for Kyiv as it struggles with power outages following a wave of strikes by Russia.

Reinsalu said that his own country planned to raise national defense spending to 3% of GDP. 

"We would like to see European countries doubling their defense expenditure in the time of the Ukrainian war and after the war, and we are going to spend 3% of our GDP on national defense," he said.

Reinsalu said the 27-nation European Union, which includes Estonia, should also increase the level of funding it earmarks in military support for Ukraine.

"The European Union combined has supported around 0.2% of its GDP to military assistance to Ukraine and I made a pledge if we could reach 1% it would make a grand difference on the ground in changing the course of the war," he said.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal wrote on Twitter that Monday's trip by Reinsalu and the six other ministers had included a discussion of tightening EU sanctions, rebuilding Ukrainian energy infrastructure, financial support, and Ukraine's "Euro-Atlantic aspirations."

The visit came the same day that US officials approved the potential sale of AIM 9X Block II tactical missiles, AGM-154 Joint Stand Off weapons, and related equipment to Finland for an estimated cost of $323.3 million (€312 million), the Defense Department said on Monday.

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