Eleven nations have requested access to Ukrainian interceptor drones, and none can buy them. Ukraine's wartime export ban — enacted after Russia's 2022 invasion to prevent technology leakage to adversaries — blocks all sales of the country's most combat-proven systems.
The hardware in demand includes Wild Hornets' Sting, a 3D-printed interceptor capable of 213 mph with a 400g explosive charge, priced at $2,100–$2,500 per unit 1. SkyFall's interceptor — the same platform referenced in — is also subject to the ban. Wild Hornets spokesman Alex Roslin confirmed the company is "ready to export if called on to do so" but cannot under current law 2. The requesting nations have not been publicly identified, though Gulf states facing active Iranian drone threats are the most probable buyers given both the threat environment and Ukraine's deployment of 201 drone warfare specialists to the region.
The ban produces a specific market distortion. Demand that would flow to Ukrainian manufacturers at $2,100–$2,500 per interceptor instead reaches buyers through American intermediaries at multiples of the price. The Merops interceptor — developed by Project Eagle, the defence venture backed by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt — drew directly on Ukrainian combat data and costs $14,000–$15,000 per unit at current production volumes 3. That is a five-to-seven-fold markup over the Ukrainian-built alternative performing the same mission. At the Pentagon's projected scale pricing of $3,000–$5,000, the gap narrows but does not close against a Ukrainian system already in volume production.
Whether Kyiv lifts the ban depends on a calculus between wartime operational security — the original rationale, rooted in preventing Russian acquisition of Ukrainian drone designs through third-country re-export — and the economic and diplomatic leverage that direct arms exports to eleven allied nations would provide 4. The longer the ban holds, the more deeply entrenched the US intermediary model becomes. Ukrainian firms retain their combat data advantage but cede manufacturing margin to American producers who package that knowledge into exportable hardware.
