As Iran’s drones swarm Gulf, Ukraine’s wartime tech lands billion-dollar deals
SOURCE: SCMP.COM
MAR 29, 2026
Published: 11:57am, 29 Mar 2026
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Saturday that his country had “undoubtedly changed the geopolitical situation” in the Middle East with a series of decade-long defence agreements with Gulf states being hit with Iranian drones and missiles.
Has he? And how important are the agreements for Ukraine, more than four years into the Russian invasion and facing its own maelstrom of military, economic and diplomatic challenges?
The Ukrainian leader has been on a whirlwind tour of the Gulf in recent days – Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar – touting what he calls Kyiv’s world-leading air defences.
Ukraine has developed a suite of tools to fend off nightly Russian drone attacks, chief among them cheap and highly effective drone-on-drone interceptors.
Moscow’s attack drones are based on the Iranian Shaheds now being fired by Tehran across the region – strikes it says are retaliation for US-Israeli air attacks on Iran.
Zelensky has sought to craft an opportunity from the war, which otherwise benefits Russia through higher oil prices and possible slowdowns in Western arms supplies to Kyiv.
Almost immediately, he started offering US allies in the region deals to get their hands on Ukrainian drone interceptors and has sent over 200 military experts.
“Surely no one else can help in this way today, with expertise,” he told reporters on Saturday.
“No one else possesses such experience.”
Ukraine has for months been downing more than 80 per cent of all incoming Russian missiles and drones – typically fired in their hundreds every night – according to an analysis of Kyiv’s air force data.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky (left) and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani shake hands during their meeting in Doha on Saturday. Photo: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/AFP
Details of what exactly Ukraine has agreed in the Gulf are slim.
“We are talking about a 10-year cooperation. We have already signed a relevant agreement with Saudi Arabia, we have just signed a similar agreement with Qatar, also for 10 years, we will sign one with the Emirates,” Zelensky said.
On the table are co-production of drones – with factories both in Ukraine and in the Gulf – and expertise sharing, he said, without providing specific information.
It is unclear what Kyiv gets in return, or whether the deals are anything more than simple arms-for-cash.
Zelensky, who had originally been pushing for expensive air defence missiles in return, said the agreements were worth “billions, not millions” to Ukraine.
“Specifically billions for our exporters – everyone will earn, Ukraine will earn, we won’t lose out.”
Ukrainian drone manufacturers said they had been inundated with requests from the Middle East since the outbreak of war in the region.
“Neither the US, nor Europe, nor the Middle East are prepared for drone warfare,” the Ukrainian drone unit commander said.
Zelensky is also keen on the region’s energy resources, he said on Saturday.
Four years of Russian attacks have decimated Ukraine’s energy network, leaving the country critically vulnerable when it comes to electricity, gas and fuel.
“We need long-term agreements with energy-producing countries … this is precisely what we are negotiating,” the Ukrainian leader said.
Civilian deaths in Iran believed to be more than 1,400: rights agency
However, Ukrainian support to the Gulf is not straightforward.
Inside the army, commercial exports of weapons at a time of war present an ethical dilemma.
“Somebody becomes a millionaire, another ends up dead or amputated. Yet they seem to be serving the same cause,” the commander of one drone unit said recently.
Producers said export deals would bring them cash to ramp up production, not take away from what they supply to the Ukrainian army.
“This is quite a risky moment for Ukrainian diplomacy,” Yevgen Magda, a political analyst and director of the Kyiv-based Institute of World Policy think tank, said.
Especially since Kyiv is an absolute newcomer to the world of international weapons sales.
“The arms market is quite a delicate thing and succeeding there with one swift move or a single tour … is very difficult,” Magda said.
“Let’s hope it will be implemented in the way that is best for Ukraine, but it’s very difficult to guarantee anything now,” he added.
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