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Monday, March 16, 2026

From Eastern Europe to the Gulf: Ukraine’s Counter-Drone Technology Goes Global

The interceptor drone systems that Ukraine developed to defend its cities and military positions from Russian-deployed Iranian Shahed attacks are now being operated in Jordan and Gulf states to protect American and allied forces from direct Iranian drone attacks. Ukraine’s counter-drone technology has gone from a domestic necessity to a global security product — just not as quickly as it should have.

Ukraine’s path to becoming a counter-drone technology provider was not planned but earned. Years of defending against mass Shahed attacks created a capability base that is more operationally proven and more specifically optimized for the Shahed threat than anything available elsewhere. Kyiv recognized the global applicability of this capability and sought to share it with American partners.

The August White House briefing was the formal attempt to begin this technology transfer. The proposal outlined a regional defense architecture for West Asia, recommended specific deployment locations, and explicitly warned about Iran’s improving drone capabilities. It was the first step in what Ukrainian officials hoped would be a sustained counter-drone partnership with the US.

The step was rejected. Political skepticism and bureaucratic inertia prevented the Trump administration from following through on the proposal. The technology transfer that Ukraine sought was delayed by eight months — eight months during which Iranian drones killed Americans and imposed significant costs on US operations.

Today, the transfer is underway. Interceptor systems and specialists are deployed in Jordan, Qatar, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia. Ukraine’s counter-drone technology is operating in the Gulf, doing the job it was designed to do. The global deployment that could have been a proactive partnership has become a reactive rescue — but it is happening, and it is working.

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