Ukraine War Briefing: Zelenskyy Offers Expertise to Counter Iranian Drones Amid Shifting Global Security Calculus

The ongoing four-year conflict in Ukraine has unexpectedly positioned Kyiv as a critical global repository of expertise in countering advanced, low-cost aerial threats, particularly the Iranian-designed Shahed Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). As of early March 2026, following significant escalations in the Middle East involving Iranian retaliation against U.S. and Israeli actions, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has leveraged this hard-won experience into a sophisticated new avenue of global diplomacy and security cooperation. A direct line of communication with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman highlights this strategic pivot: an offer to provide specialized technical assistance to combat the very drones now terrorizing the Gulf region. This article dissects the scope of this engagement, the technical reality of the drone threat, the industrial capacity underpinning Ukraine’s offer, and the complex geopolitical maneuvering that this novel security partnership represents for the trajectory of the war against Russia.
The Scope of Engagement: Beyond the Kingdom
President Zelenskyy’s dialogue with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on March 7, 2026, was not merely a bilateral outreach but a strategic component of a wider, coordinated diplomatic thrust aimed at neutralizing the pervasive drone threat across the entire Middle East security architecture. This initiative was explicitly designed to frame the Ukrainian defense experience as a solution to a collective regional vulnerability, demanding a multilateral response rather than relying on siloed national defenses.
Immediate Outreach to Key Gulf Cooperation Council Members
The engagement with Riyadh was the most prominent, but it was preceded by extensive communication with other vital regional actors. In the days leading up to the call with the Crown Prince, President Zelenskyy confirmed direct discussions with the heads of state or senior officials representing a constellation of nations within the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and beyond.
- GCC Engagement: Direct discussions were held with the leadership of the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait.
- Broader Regional Outreach: Dialogue also extended to Jordan, further cementing the perception in Kyiv that the threat posed by Iranian UAVs, used by proxy or directly, was a shared regional vulnerability.
- The United States Approach: Reports indicated that the United States government, a central pillar of Middle Eastern security and Ukraine’s main supporter, had formally approached Kyiv seeking its specialized expertise to counter the surge in drone incursions across the region.
- Internal Directives: Following this request, President Zelenskyy issued internal orders to prepare the necessary counter-drone equipment and deploy the required Ukrainian technical experts. While operational specifics remained classified at the time of the briefing, the order signaled a commitment to fulfilling the request, contingent on not compromising Ukraine’s own defense. The US is reportedly deploying the Ukraine-tested Merops counter-drone system to the Middle East, a system that has logged over 1,000 Shahed intercepts in Ukraine.
- UK Endorsement: Reports confirmed that UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer publicly acknowledged that Ukrainian defense experts would be instrumental in assisting Gulf nations. Starmer announced that the UK would bring in these experts, working alongside British specialists, to help Gulf partners shoot down the Iranian drone attacks. This confirmation integrated Ukraine’s counter-drone know-how into the collective defense planning of a major NATO power operating in the region.
- Flight Characteristics: These drones are typically characterized by relatively slow speed, adherence to low-altitude flight paths to circumvent radar detection, and an operational doctrine focused on high saturation attack profiles.
- Payload and Range: The Shahed-136 variant can carry an explosive warhead estimated at 20 to 40 kilograms, and possesses a range of approximately 1,000 to 2,000 kilometers.
- Strategic Use: In the context of the Middle East conflict, they are deployed as instruments of regional coercion and deterrence against nations allied with the United States, replacing the need for launching more expensive, high-value ballistic missiles. The economic calculus is stark: the cost of launching an attack is orders of magnitude lower than the cost of defending against it, especially when relying on expensive legacy interceptors.
- Sustained Exposure: Russia has employed these Iranian drones extensively, often in coordinated swarms, against Ukrainian civilian infrastructure, energy grids, and military positions throughout the four-year conflict. One review estimated that Russia launched approximately 32,200 Shahed-type strike UAVs in 2025 alone.
- Countermeasure Refinement: This sustained application provided Ukrainian forces with an unparalleled operational tempo for testing and refining countermeasures against the Shahed’s known operational vulnerabilities. The crisis in the Gulf thus presented a situation where Ukraine was facing an external manifestation of a threat it had spent years mitigating internally.
- Production Capacity Scale: As of early 2026, the projected production capacity of Ukraine’s military-industrial complex is estimated to reach USD $55 billion annually—a 55-fold increase from the start of the full-scale invasion in 2022. In 2025, the figure reached $35 billion.
- Self-Sufficiency Metrics: The Head of State had previously noted that domestic manufacturers were meeting over 50% of the defense forces’ needs for weapons in the preceding year.
- Drone Specialization: FPV drones have become a mass asymmetric weapon, with production capacity exceeding 8 million units per year, accounting for over 60% of Russian losses in 2025. Critically, production capacity for interceptor drones—the very technology applicable to the Shahed threat—increased eightfold, with 100,000 units produced in 2025. Production capacity for this segment alone is estimated at $25 billion.
- Trump Administration Stance: Reports highlighted that the sitting US President, Donald Trump, had maintained a long-standing public stance suggesting that American support for Ukraine was an excessive drain on US resources.
- Negotiation Urgency: This political figure had, in the preceding year (2025), expressed public commentary suggesting a need for Zelenskyy to “get a deal done” regarding peace negotiations with Russia, even claiming Kyiv was the obstacle. This environment created an added urgency for President Zelenskyy to secure tangible benefits from his engagements—such as the strategic offer to the Saudis—as a means of reinforcing indispensable Western commitment amid potential political shifts.
This widespread communication demonstrated Kyiv’s calculated approach: offering its unique operational knowledge to secure its own leverage and deepen its strategic ties across the Middle East, recognizing the interconnectedness of the global security environment.
Confirmed Requests for Ukrainian Technical Support
The diplomatic initiative was swiftly substantiated by concrete actions from key international partners, validating the immediate utility of Ukraine’s battlefield-tested capabilities. The most significant confirmation came from Kyiv’s primary benefactor.
Alignment with Western and European Security Assessments
The perceived urgency and value of Ukrainian expertise were not confined to Middle Eastern capitals; key Western and European allies publicly endorsed this necessary interoperability, underscoring the interconnected nature of modern aerial defense challenges.
This alignment confirmed that Kyiv’s hard-won experience was not just recognized by the affected Middle Eastern states but was actively being championed and integrated into the broader strategic defense planning of key Western allies.
The Technical Reality: Shahed-Class Drones in Global Conflict
The central catalyst for this diplomatic surge is the widespread proliferation and effective, low-cost deployment of Iranian-designed UAVs, designated under the “Shahed” family. Ukraine’s experience fighting these weapons for years has made it the world’s foremost authority on their neutralization.
Operational Profile and Strategic Deployment of the UAVs
The Shahed designation encompasses a family of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles primarily associated with Iranian production, which have become a hallmark of modern, low-cost, asymmetric warfare employed by various state and non-state actors.
Comparison to Russian Tactics in the Ukraine Conflict
The direct parallel drawn by Ukrainian officials is based on their direct, sustained, and industrial-scale experience in mitigating this exact threat.
Implications for Future Drone Proliferation
The successful adoption and deployment of these affordable drone systems by multiple state actors—Iran in the Gulf and Russia in Ukraine—signals a profound inflection point in global conflict dynamics.
If sovereign entities like Saudi Arabia or the UAE cannot effectively or economically neutralize this threat, it sets a dangerous precedent. This precedent suggests that mass quantities of low-cost aerial aggression can be used with relative impunity against critical national infrastructure across contested regions. Consequently, Ukraine’s offer to provide countermeasures is strategically positioned as an effort to disrupt this dangerous trend and restore a defensive balance against cheap aerial aggression, directly linking its own security to regional stability.
Domestic Resilience and Industrial Innovation in Kyiv
The foundation of Ukraine’s capability to offer technical assistance to major international partners is its own defense industry, which has undergone a forced, massive scale-up under the existential pressure of the Russian invasion.
The Necessity-Driven Shift in Ukrainian Defense Manufacturing
The full-scale Russian invasion, which began over four years prior to this briefing, acted as a severe, high-stakes catalyst for Ukraine’s domestic arms industry. Facing an overwhelming quantity of incoming materiel, much of it Russian-manufactured using Iranian components, Kyiv could not rely solely on foreign aid for all its defensive requirements.
This necessity drove an intense and rapid focus on developing indigenous solutions, particularly in the drone sector. The swift transition from theoretical concepts to mass-deployable systems—such as low-cost drone interceptors—demonstrated a remarkable wartime agility within the Ukrainian defense sector.
Quantifying Domestic Production Capabilities
The progress in domestic armaments has reached a scale that is now influencing international defense markets and securing future financing.
This established industrial base, capable of producing excess capacity in counter-drone technology, formed the essential material backbone of the assistance package being offered to the Gulf nations and the United States.
Geopolitical Maneuvering and Allied Pressure
The offer to Riyadh and the corresponding outreach to other Gulf states must be viewed through the lens of acute geopolitical pressure and Kyiv’s urgent need to secure long-term Western commitment amidst domestic political volatility in the United States.
The Shadow of Shifting US Political Stances
The diplomatic context was made more complex by the evolving political climate within Ukraine’s principal benefactor, the United States, particularly given the sitting President’s established policy positions.
The Interplay with Regional Security Pacts
By providing a unique and necessary security solution to the Gulf states, Ukraine sought to become an indispensable strategic partner in a theater vital to U.S. interests, thereby building a wider and more resilient coalition of support that transcended the immediate European theater.
The offer to Riyadh and the outreach to Qatar, UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Jordan was a clear attempt by Kyiv to integrate itself more deeply into the broader, non-European security architecture—especially nations that host significant U.S. military assets and face direct Iranian pressure. Furthermore, Ukrainian officials explicitly linked the provision of assistance to partners with leverage in their primary goal: securing support to bring a just end to the war with Russia. This proactive measure sought to secure long-term strategic engagement regardless of immediate political winds.
Future Trajectories: Implications for Global Drone Warfare Governance
The current confluence of events—the Middle East drone attacks, the US request, and the UK’s proactive endorsement of Ukrainian technical transfer—sets a crucial precedent for how the international community addresses asymmetric aerial threats in the 21st century.
Establishing Norms for Cross-Regional Technical Assistance
The technical and diplomatic exchange between Ukraine and Saudi Arabia, underpinned by the formal US request, represents a pioneering model for cooperation. It illustrates how nations facing technologically similar, asymmetric threats can pool expertise across vast geopolitical distances based on shared, contemporary adversarial experience.
Should this cooperation formalize into a standard operating procedure, it could establish a durable precedent for future defense technology transfer. This model would be governed by shared combat experience rather than solely by traditional manufacturer-client relationships, potentially leading to a more dynamic and responsive global market for niche anti-drone solutions, validated by Ukrainian battlefield results.
The Long-Term Impact on the Russia-Ukraine War Calculus
The success of this diplomatic and technical outreach holds direct, tangible implications for the protracted war in Ukraine. Every successful arrangement that secures advanced air defense systems or other vital military support for Ukraine, gained in exchange for its counter-drone knowledge, directly strengthens Kyiv’s ability to sustain its defense against Russian ballistic missiles and heavy aerial bombardment.
The ultimate strategic objective, as articulated by President Zelenskyy, is to ensure that any assistance provided abroad ultimately feeds back into the greater strategic goal: bringing a just and definitive end to the war being waged against Ukraine’s territory and people. This entire episode underscores a fundamental reality of contemporary international relations: in the twenty-first century, security challenges, technological innovation, and diplomatic leverage are inextricably linked across the globe.