Ukraine’s most valuable export? Expertise in drone warfare.

Anti-drone expertise: Ukraine’s new export weapon

After three years immersed in the most drone-dominated conflict in human history, Ukraine has forged a unique asset. It is a resource that no arms giant can manufacture in its factories and that no sovereign wealth fund can simply buy: the world’s most advanced and battle-tested operational expertise in modern aerial warfare. Today, Kyiv is gradually realizing that this know-how constitutes a diplomatic and commercial lever without equal in its arsenal.

This learning process was a painful one. Rather than following traditional military training programs, an entire generation of young Ukrainians learned to fly FPV drones on the job, relying on YouTube tutorials, directly confronting Russian jamming, and exchanging information on tactical loops. These skills were put to the test against a responsive enemy and were refined almost every week. By intercepting between 2,000 and 4,000 drones per month for much of 2024, Ukraine was able to test every method of neutralization—from kinetic strikes to electronic warfare, including lasers, nets, and AI-targeting—under real-world conditions that no simulation exercise could replicate. This institutional experience is not merely a side effect of the war; it is one of its most crucial strategic outcomes.

Ground operations: A Ukrainian soldier tests a Bumblebee drone in Kharkiv (Image: Viacheslav Madiievskyi/Ukrinform/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

The Strategic Shift Among the Gulf Powers

The Gulf states are fully aware of the scale of these new challenges. Today, vital infrastructure such as the Saudi refinery in Ras Tanura finds itself at the mercy of small flying machines that cost less than a sedan. This reality illustrates, to the point of absurdity, the financial asymmetry that now exists between offense and defense. To address this, Riyadh and Abu Dhabi have spent billions acquiring American and Israeli systems. Although highly sophisticated, these defense systems were designed for a different era: one of ballistic missiles with predictable trajectories and obvious radar signatures, not to repel swarms of low-cost drones capable of spoofing GPS signals and whose technological evolution far outpaces the bureaucracy of military procurement.

This is precisely where the balance of power shifts in Kyiv’s favor. Admittedly, the Gulf’s sovereign wealth funds collectively amount to more than $6 trillion (approximately €5.2 trillion), dwarfing Ukraine’s 2024 defense budget. Yet Ukraine possesses a wealth that cannot be measured in petrodollars: the experience of fire. While traditional military aid is driven by solidarity or political will, the transfer of technology and expertise follows an entirely different dynamic, dictated by scarcity, added value, and shared interests.

Monetizing the battlefield experience

Ukrainian authorities now acknowledge it: their country is not just a humanitarian cause; it is also a veritable testing ground for the wars of the future. With the creation of Brave1, a state-run incubator dedicated to defense technologies, Ukraine has achieved the feat of reducing the time between feedback from the front lines and the development of new equipment, cutting the wait from several years to just a few weeks. Such agility holds immense commercial and strategic value.

In the air: Members of the Ukrainian National Guard’s 13th Khartiia Operational Brigade (Photo: Viacheslav Madiievskyi/Ukrinform/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Building on this technological edge, Ukraine could very well engage in the joint development of jamming or interception systems with leading entities such as the Edge Group in Abu Dhabi or SAMI (Saudi Arabian Military Industries) in Riyadh. It could even become a consultant to the armed forces of Southeast Asia, which are watching the rising tensions in the South China Sea with concern. In this new paradigm, Kyiv would no longer be a supplicant seeking solidarity, but a partner offering a product that no other country is capable of providing.

Failure as a genuine selling point

While Volodymyr Zelensky has already initiated discussions about a “drone coalition” and signed technology agreements in Europe, the official narrative has yet to sufficiently highlight the true nature of this gem. Ukraine’s real strength does not lie in its physical hardware; machines are always eventually copied, modified, and rendered obsolete. The real gem lies in the institutional memory of failure. What is most valuable is knowing why a particular interception failed, how a particular jamming attempt was circumvented, and why a particular tactical certainty was shattered in the face of a new wave of Russian attacks.

Developing capabilities through bloodshed and war is an unspeakable brutality. Ukraine did not choose to become this vast testing ground, but it has validated expertise there that no other nation, no defense contractor, and no computer simulation has ever come close to achieving. On the global arms market, buyers are only just beginning to understand the true cost of this knowledge.