On 5 March, President Trump publicly asked Zelenskyy for help countering Iranian Shahed drones in the Middle East. "Trump will take 'any assistance from any country,'" Fortune reported 1. The request came the same day the trilateral was suspended — and Kyiv moved to exploit the opening within 48 hours.
Since February 2022, the US-Ukraine military relationship has flowed in one direction: Javelins, HIMARS, Patriots, and Storm Shadows from Washington to Kyiv. Trump's request reversed that current. Ukraine has spent three years developing electronic warfare countermeasures, radar signature catalogues, and interception protocols against the same Iranian-manufactured Shahed-136 drones now threatening US forces and Gulf partners. No NATO member has equivalent operational data, because no NATO member has faced sustained Shahed bombardment at the scale Ukraine has — over 8,800 kamikaze drones in a single day by early March .
Ukraine had already announced on 2 March that it would package its counter-drone knowledge — radar signatures, interception angles, electronic warfare countermeasures — as exportable expertise for non-NATO states facing Iranian-pattern threats . Trump's public request turned that policy declaration into a live negotiation with the world's largest defence buyer. The political calculus is direct: Zelenskyy gains leverage with a US president who has been ambivalent about sustained Ukraine support, and Trump gets a capability gap addressed without the procurement timelines that plague the US defence industrial base. The Kyiv Independent reported that Ukraine's backing of the US-Israeli campaign against Iran was explicitly designed to build favour with Trump 2.
