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Germany funds 2,000 TerMIT UGVs for Ukraine

The German Government is funding the production and delivery of 2,000 TerMIT UGVs to the Ukrainian Armed Forces via the German-Ukrainian joint venture Quantum Tencore Industries.

TerMIT Ukrainian Defence Forces
Two TerMIT UGVs on a sandy hillImage: Ukrainian Ministry of Defence
By GAU
Published: 21/06/2026
4 Min Read
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Zur deutschen Fassung

  • Deutsch (German)

As part of its own military assistance for Ukraine, the German government is funding the production and delivery of 2,000 TerMIT unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs).

The contract was awarded to Quantum Tencore Industries (QTI), a German-Ukrainian joint venture recently announced as part of the “Build with Ukraine” initiative, which brings the German drone specialist Quantum Systems and the Ukrainian company Tencore – which specialises in unmanned ground vehicles – together.

According to Quantum Systems, the production is to be carried out in collaboration with an established industrial partner in Germany. This comes with the advantage of, on the one hand, utilising existing production capacities and, on the other hand, being able to ramp up series production at short notice.

With the 2,000 TerMIT UGVs manufactured in Germany, the Ukrainian Armed Forces will receive unmanned ground vehicles that have already been tested, are widely established and are highly valued within the next 12 months.

Thousands of missions have already been carried out by a wide variety of users across Ukraine – including the well-known 3rd Assault Brigade, the Kraken Operations Unit of the HUR MO and around 50 other users – using the more than 3,000 UGVs delivered to date.

UGV missions according to the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence
The number of UGV missions within the Ukrainian Armed Forces in the recent months | Image: Ukrainian Ministry of Defence

The TerMIT can be used for a wide variety of mission profiles. For example, the UGVs can be deployed for casualty evacuation (CASEVAC), engineering tasks – there are modules for laying barbed wire and mines – or to support logistics.

Additionally, there are three options for active participation in combat. The unmanned ground vehicle is either equipped with the “Burya” or “Khyzhak” remote-controlled weapon stations.

The first carries the heavy machine gun Browning M2 or the Mk 19 grenade launcher. The second is fitted with a thermal imaging sight and a laser rangefinder, and fires 7.62 mm calibre ammunition either at ground or aerial targets.

In particular, the use of unmanned ground vehicles in logistics operations at the front is becoming increasingly important. To minimise casualties, the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence has made it a priority to switch logistics operations at the front to unmanned ground vehicles as much as possible.

A TerMIT UGV is used during a CASEVAC mission | Video: Artan Special Unit

Ukraine likely to receive special TerMIT UGV version

In the context of the production of Ukrainian UGVs in Germany, there is another interesting detail worth mentioning. It appears that the Ukrainian Armed Forces are set to receive a special version.

Quantum Tencore Industries plans to integrate Quantum Systems’ open software platform, MOSAIC UXS, into the system. According to the manufacturer, this will enable the UGVs to “benefit from new features, optimisations and integrations”.

MOSAIC UXS is a comprehensive and complex drone operations system which centrally networks a wide variety of drones via an open interface, enabling a single operator to control them. The system can also be used for mission planning.

As a result, MOSAIC UXS combines reconnaissance, target identification, mission execution and battle damage assessment within a single user interface.


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TAGGED:GermanyQuantum SystemsQuantum Tencore IndustriesTerMITUkraine

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