President Zelenskyy confirmed on 9 March that 11 countries have formally requested Ukrainian counter-drone assistance 1. The list spans Iran's immediate neighbours, EU member states, and the United States itself — the full geographic arc of the Iranian drone threat.
The volume of demand reflects a gap that pre-war Western procurement did not anticipate. Gulf States exhausted Patriot stocks in days. Roughly 100–150 THAAD interceptors — a quarter of the global inventory — were spent in the Iran war's first week . Lockheed Martin has agreed to quadruple THAAD production to 400 interceptors per year, but delivery at that rate will take years. Ukraine's $1,000–$2,000 interceptor drones are available now, tested against the same Shahed variants Iran is deploying, and cost less than one ten-thousandth of a PAC-3 MSE round.
Eleven formal requests in one week means eleven governments now have a material stake in the survival of Ukraine's defence industry. Any peace settlement that curtails Ukrainian weapons production has consequences beyond the bilateral war — it reduces counter-drone capacity across the Middle East and Europe. Countries that supported Kyiv through UN votes and statements of solidarity now depend on Ukrainian technology to protect their own airspace. The frozen trilateral talks resume — whenever they resume — with Kyiv offering something eleven governments need.
