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Ukraine’s drone interceptors, the world’s most wanted air defence

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Ukraine’s war-tested drone interceptors are suddenly in global demand as countries scramble for cheaper ways to stop Iranian-style attack drones.

After years battling waves of Shahed UAVs launched by Russia, Ukraine has quietly built one of the most effective counter-drone systems in the world. Now allies — including the United States — are asking for help.

The Drone That Changed the Battlefield

Russia began deploying Iranian-designed Shahed drones soon after its full-scale invasion in 2022. The one-way attack drones are launched in swarms and aimed at cities, power grids and infrastructure.

Ukraine responded by creating a layered defence system combining electronic warfare, mobile gun teams and specialised interceptor drones. According to Ukrainian commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrskyi, interceptor drones alone shot down more than 70% of Shahed attacks targeting Kyiv in February.

The result: an overall interception rate approaching 80%.

A €3,000 Weapon That Saves Million-Euro Missiles

The secret to their appeal is brutally simple — price.

Ukrainian interceptor drones cost roughly €1,000 to €4,000 each. By contrast, a single missile from the MIM-104 Patriot air defence system can cost about €3.5 million.

Shahed drones themselves cost roughly €25,000 to €40,000. Destroying them with interceptors allows Ukraine to preserve scarce missile stockpiles while defending cities and infrastructure.

War in the Middle East Raises the Stakes

Recent fighting involving Iran has underscored the vulnerability of traditional air defences to cheap drones.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that more than 800 Patriot missiles were reportedly fired in just three days of fighting in the region — more than Ukraine received during much of the war.

“Everyone understands Patriot missiles are not enough,” Zelenskyy warned.

Washington Turns to Kyiv

Kyiv says Washington has already requested assistance in countering Shahed-style drones across the Middle East.

Ukraine has offered interceptor drones, operational know-how and specialists to help protect civilian sites and oil infrastructure. Zelenskyy says the exchange could involve Western missile supplies in return.

Ukraine’s Drone Industry Ramps Up

The country’s defence sector is already scaling fast. Officials say Ukraine produced roughly 100,000 interceptor drones in 2025, with manufacturing capacity expanding eightfold.

More than 450 companies now produce drones in Ukraine, dozens of them high-end developers. With Kyiv opening arms exports and demand surging worldwide, the small interceptor that defended Ukraine’s skies may soon become a staple of global air defence.

Affordable and efficient: Why everyone wants Ukraine’s drone interceptors

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