Ukrainian officials are discussing the creation of a state-regulated arms export market, though no formal lifting of the 2022 export ban has occurred 1. The National Security and Defence Council will determine what weapons can leave the country without weakening Kyiv's own capacity — a question that shifted from hypothetical to urgent when eleven countries formally requested Ukrainian counter-drone help and Gulf States began submitting purchase orders for thousands of interceptor drones.
The ban was a wartime necessity. In early 2022, Ukraine was losing territory daily and scrambling for ammunition from any source. Exporting anything was unthinkable. But Ukraine's defence industrial base has changed since then. The country now mass-produces interceptor drones, has developed electronic warfare systems tested against platforms no other nation has faced, and fields unmanned naval and aerial systems that Western defence firms would take years to replicate. What began as an offer to share counter-drone expertise escalated within a fortnight to crew deployments across four Gulf States and arms purchase requests from eleven countries 2.
The fiscal argument is concrete. Ukraine's economy has contracted sharply during the war. Western military aid faces political uncertainty in Washington — where congressional appropriations are contested cycle by cycle — and fatigue in European capitals. Arms export revenue, denominated in Gulf currencies and backed by governments with large sovereign wealth funds, would give Kyiv an income stream independent of allied budgets. A country whose technology other nations need for their own defence holds leverage that one dependent entirely on allied goodwill does not.
The corresponding risk is equally concrete. Russian drone volumes now exceed 9,000 per week , and the 13–14 March barrage alone comprised 430 drones and 68 missiles targeting Energy infrastructure. Every interceptor drone exported is one not available over Kyiv, Kharkiv, or Odessa. The Council must identify the threshold: how much can Ukraine export before its own population pays the cost in unintercepted strikes. That calculation requires honest assessment of production capacity, current stockpiles, and the rate at which Russian attacks are intensifying — none of which Kyiv has disclosed publicly.
