Ukraine announced on 2 March that it will offer drone-interception expertise to non-NATO states facing Iranian-pattern unmanned aerial threats 1. The package covers radar signatures, optimal interception angles, and electronic warfare countermeasures — all derived from combat, not simulation.
No military has more experience defeating Iranian-design drones. Ukrainian air defences have engaged thousands of Shahed-136 variants and their Russian-manufactured copies since Iran began supplying them in autumn 2022. That operational dataset — which interception method works at which altitude, which electronic signatures precede which attack profile, where the guidance systems are most vulnerable — has no equivalent in NATO training programmes, because no NATO member has faced this threat at scale.
The intended recipients are states outside the Western alliance structure facing drone proliferation without integrated air-defence networks. Saudi Arabia and the UAE have confronted Houthi drone attacks since 2019; several sub-Saharan African states face armed drone use by non-state actors. For these governments, Ukraine's combat-tested knowledge has immediate practical value that a NATO membership aspiration does not.
The diplomatic content matters as much as the defence content. Kyiv draws a direct line between Russia's war and Iran's global proliferation network, reframing its own defence as a contribution to international security rather than a regional expense. As European support displaces American funding and Trump presses Zelenskyy for a rapid settlement, Ukraine's ability to present itself as a defence partner rather than an aid recipient strengthens its negotiating hand. The announcement also complicates any diplomatic effort to separate the Iran file from the Russia file: if Ukrainian expertise is actively protecting third countries from Iranian drones, the two conflicts are operationally linked whether negotiators wish them to be or not.
