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Drones: Industry & Defence
5JUL

Zelensky plans 10 EU arms export offices

2 min read
10:21UTC

Volodymyr Zelensky announced ten EU weapons export offices, concentrated in the Baltics and Northern Europe, to open by the end of 2026, building a state apparatus to sell Ukrainian drones into allied supply chains.

TechnologyDeveloping

President Volodymyr Zelensky announced in early June a plan to open ten EU weapons export offices, concentrated in the Baltic and Northern European states, by the end of 2026 1. The offices would form a state apparatus to sell Ukrainian defence production into allied supply chains, anchored by Spetstechnoexport (STE), Ukraine's state-owned defence export agency.

This pairs with the rocket-fuel plant Fire Point began at Skrydstrup, Denmark. Together they convert ad-hoc overseas workarounds into a licensing regime. In March, Zelensky disclosed roughly ten drone factories built abroad to dodge Ukraine's wartime export ban; the new offices replace that circumvention with sovereign-sanctioned export. The character has changed from hidden line to state network.

Ukraine now counts 450 drone producers, a manufacturing base wider than that of the rest of the Alliance put together 2. The structural test is whether embedded means dependent: every export route still runs through a Western buyer writing the cheque or a Western agency clearing the paperwork. The Romanian intercept over Estonia showed how exposed the wider Baltic theatre has become, the same region where most of the offices would sit.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Ukraine has spent four years fighting a war with drones. In doing so, it has built up around 450 companies that make drones and related systems, more than almost any country in the world. Many of these products are now considered among the best available at their price point, because they were tested in real combat. Zelensky wants to turn this wartime industry into an export business. The plan is to open ten offices across Europe by the end of 2026, starting in the Baltic states and Scandinavia, so Ukrainian drone companies can sell their products to allied militaries. Think of it as Ukraine setting up showrooms for its combat-tested kit across Europe.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Ukraine accumulated 450 drone producers because necessity drove decentralised improvisation: firms outside the formal defence-industrial complex built FPV drones, interceptors, and ISR platforms during the war. That base now represents an exportable capability surplus.

Zelensky's announcement builds on the institutional groundwork laid by Spetstechnoexport, which had already formalised the Red Cat partnership via SEC disclosure . The EU office network serves a dual purpose: generating hard currency for Ukraine's war effort and embedding Ukrainian platforms in allied supply chains before ceasefire negotiations potentially freeze technology transfer arrangements.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    Baltic and Nordic NATO states can diversify away from US-sole-source procurement for FPV and interceptor drones by integrating Ukrainian platforms through the export office network, reducing single-vendor dependency.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Western drone manufacturers, particularly US-listed firms competing on NATO contracts, face price-competitive Ukrainian alternatives with validated combat records entering the same procurement channels through Spetstechnoexport.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Ukraine's export control regime remains in force for its most capable interceptors; if front-line demand surges, Kyiv may divert export inventory back to domestic use, stranding allied buyers who budgeted for Ukrainian supply.

    Medium term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #11 · Ukraine starts exporting the factory

Militarnyi· 7 Jun 2026
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