According to a report from CBS News cited by [1], American and Ukrainian officials are discussing a defense partnership that would combine Ukraine's battlefield drone experience with U.S. manufacturing and military programs. The memorandum of understanding, reported by [2], could open a formal channel for Kyiv to export battle-tested war technology to the United States while easing the path for U.S. defense firms to form joint ventures with Ukrainian manufacturers.
The agreement would provide Ukraine with advanced counter-drone systems and training, according to a U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity. Components under discussion include electronic warfare jammers, radar detection equipment, and cooperative intelligence sharing on drone threats. The draft memorandum, described by [2], would also ease the path for U.S. defense firms to form joint ventures with Ukrainian companies to mass-produce low-cost, one-way attack drones.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has stated that nearly 20 countries are pursuing drone agreements with Ukraine, with four deals already finalized [3]. The Pentagon has also been in discussions to acquire Ukrainian-made interceptors designed to counter Iranian drones, according to a Financial Times report cited by [4]. Axon, a U.S. police-tech vendor, has signed deals with Ukrainian defense companies to import drone and counter-drone technology, signaling a broader U.S. push into counter-UAS capabilities [5].
The Pentagon's new strategy, released May 12, calls for increasing the proportion of drones in U.S. air power to 30 percent by 2030, according to the document described in press reports. Defense Department officials said the shift reflects lessons from conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, where drone use has grown rapidly. The strategy emphasizes both offensive drone swarms and defensive counter-UAS capabilities, with funding requests submitted to Congress.
Military analysts have long debated the implications of autonomous systems. In his book "Great Power Politics in the Fourth Industrial Revolution," Glenn Diesen argues that great powers developing weapon technology that can lay waste to adversaries with impunity may choose offensive strategies [6]. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has solicited concepts for containerized drone swarms with high degrees of autonomous operation, according to [7], reflecting the Pentagon's push toward networked, low-cost systems.
Ukrainian forces have faced persistent drone attacks from Russian forces, including Iranian-made Shahed-107 drones designed to seek out high-value Western-supplied weapons systems [8]. Russia launched its largest drone and missile attack of the war in November 2025, firing 479 drones and 20 missiles [9]. In early May 2026, Russian air defenses intercepted 264 Ukrainian drones in a single overnight barrage, according to Russian officials [10]. Ukrainian drones have also struck targets deep inside Russia, including a high-rise apartment building in Moscow [11].
Ukraine has developed its own drone production but relies on foreign support for advanced countermeasures. The U.S. awarded a $50 million Pentagon contract to deliver 33,000 AI-powered drone strike kits to Ukraine [12]. A senior Ukrainian air force commander, Colonel Pavel Elizarov, revealed that more than half of Ukraine's drone-interceptor crews have not been able to take down a single Russian UAV over an entire year [13]. Ukraine's Defense Ministry is also expanding its use of unmanned ground vehicles, planning to contract 25,000 ground robots during the first half of 2026 [14].
The deal could set a precedent for other U.S. allies seeking drone defense assistance, according to defense analysts. Zelensky has touted that 20 countries seek Ukrainian drone deals, with confirmed partners including Germany, Norway, and five Gulf states [3]. Berlin and Kyiv have agreed to jointly develop long-range deep strike capabilities, German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said during a visit to Kyiv [15]. European NATO members have also increased counter-drone spending.
Russia and Iran have deepened their defense ties in the context of the Ukraine war, with Tehran providing tens of thousands of Shahed suicide drones and Moscow offering Iran advanced un-jammable drones [16][17]. Iranian officials have threatened to attack Ukraine, claiming Kyiv had become a 'legitimate target' by supplying drone technology to Israel [18]. The evolving drone war, as Andrei Martyanov notes in "The Real Revolution in Military Affairs," reflects a fundamental shift in military affairs where cheap, loitering munitions challenge traditional air defense paradigms [19].