Open-source signals.
Operational clarity.
Published weekly, every Tuesday. Open-source signals synthesising the defence tech landscape across Ukraine, Europe, and the emerging Kyiv–Brussels corridor.
Latest intelligence.
Rohde & Schwarz-INFOZAHYST partnership validates battlefield-to-market model — poland enacts crisis management legislation whilst NATO rejects $143bn Ukraine funding
Three converging signals define this period: German precision engineering capital is now scaling Ukrainian combat-proven EW systems for international markets; New Polish law mandates counter-drone capabilities for critical infrastructure as NATO allies block predictable long-term financing mechanisms; Nearly 950 aerial targets neutralised in April 2026 alone (55% month-over-month increase) with government orders for medium-range strike capability.
Germany formalises €1bn+ bilateral defence tech partnership — NATO institutionalises Ukrainian defence tech procurement
Three converging signals define this period: Brave Germany programme launched 12 May creates grant-backed co-development pathway for Ukrainian startups in UAVs, AI, and long-range strike systems; Alliance launching pre-vetted C-UAS marketplace summer 2026 with 4 Ukrainian firms already certified at Latvia test range; DG Industry's 250kg guided glide bomb transitions from Brave1 concept to combat readiness in 17 months.
Germany launches Brave Germany programme as Ukraine's first bilateral defence tech fund — NATO pre-vetted C-UAS marketplace launching summer 2026 opens institutional procurement channel
Four converging signals define this period: Creates direct co-development pathway and grant funding for Ukrainian startups in UAVs, AI, lasers, missiles, and secure comms; 18 counter-drone systems including 4 Ukrainian companies testing at Latvia range will bypass traditional requirements-based procurement; Ukrainian forces deploying AI-powered autonomous turrets specifically because fiber-optic FPV drones "resist electronic warfare; Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar purchasing counter-drone and EW capabilities directly from Ukrainian manufacturers.
EU mobilises €104bn into Polish-Ukrainian defence corridor — turbojet Shaheds render propeller interceptors obsolete
Four converging signals define this period: Poland's €43.7bn SAFE agreement (signed 3 May) and Ukraine's €60bn EU procurement loan create the highest-velocity capital deployment zone in; Russia's mass deployment of 460mph turbojet-upgraded loitering munitions has created a decisive technology gap; Ukraine's propeller interceptor; The European Defence Agency and Commission's 29 April agreement to advance BraveTech EU into its next phase validates Ukraine's role in European; MP investigations into inflated drone/EW procurement and leaked "Mindich tapes" alleging high-level Defence Ministry corruption strike at Ukraine's.
Poland transforms Ukraine from aid recipient to strategic defence supplier — EU defence procurement architecture now structurally favours Ukrainian firms
Four converging signals define this period: Joint drone fleet initiative, Polish acquisition of Ukrainian counter-drone tech through SAFE programme; EDIP's €1.5bn programme mandates 65% EU/EEA content with dedicated €300m Ukraine support instrument; Wild Hornets' STING interceptor accounts for ~70% of Shahed kills with serial deployment validated by MOD; U.S..
Ukraine deploys $260M to 19 UGV manufacturers while regulatory framework lags — european defence primes actively partner with non-US technology providers
Three converging signals define this period: The world's largest autonomous ground vehicle procurement programme validates serial production capability across Ukrainian suppliers; Helsing's three-digit million euro Eurofighter AI/EW contract and Poland-France bilateral defence industry cooperation create direct pathways for; Export controls directly degraded Ukrainian battlefield capability whilst US CHIPS Act deploys $21.7bn to secure GaN manufacturing.
Ukrainian UGVs achieve first zero-casualty offensive capture — ukraine pivots from aid recipient to global defence exporter
Four converging signals define this period: 22,000+ combat missions in three months validate operational readiness at scale; Security agreements with five Middle Eastern states (Syria, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, UAE; Estonia cancels €500M armoured vehicle programme for drone defence; Poland, France; Viktor Orbán's electoral defeat removes primary blocker of EU loan to Ukraine; parallel EU-UK negotiations could allow British weapons purchases with.
Ukrainian defence tech crosses institutional legitimacy threshold — long-range strike UAVs achieve strategic systems status
Four converging signals define this period: $100M Q1 2026 capital influx with US investors now competing for $25-50M+ deals in companies showing $200-500M battlefield-proven revenues; Swarmer's; Ukrainian drones now routinely penetrate 900+ km into Russian territory; US $1.5 trillion FY2027 defence budget emphasises autonomous systems and AI whilst Sweden's €800M counter-UAS programme explicitly incorporates; streamlined write-off procedures for combat-destroyed equipment and civilian infrastructure access to military airspace control systems reduce.
Ukraine pivots from aid recipient to defence exporter with $1B+ Gulf partnerships — €1.76bn in EU institutional funding opens this week, creating systematic Series A/B deal flow
Four converging signals define this period: President Zelensky secured 10-year strategic agreements with Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Jordan covering maritime drones, air defence systems; EDIP's €260M Ukraine allocation (€100M for startups, €35M for battlefield innovation) plus Poland's €175M BGK guarantee establish the first; Ukraine destroyed 10,000 Russian UAVs in February using interceptor drones; Germany's Quantum Systems immediately ordered 15; The $1.1bn Pentagon Drone Dominance Program winner is opening a joint production facility with Wilcox Industries in New Hampshire.
NATO institutionalises Ukrainian defence tech funding — US institutional capital enters Ukrainian defence tech
Four converging signals define this period: The UNITE-Brave programme launched with €10M for Counter-UAS solutions, scaling to €50M; The US-Ukraine Recovery Fund made its inaugural defence investment in Sine Engineering's GPS-denied navigation software; The Cabinet of Ministers converted the Soviet-era state concern into an OECD-aligned joint stock company explicitly designed to "create conditions; 25 German companies signed a coordination agreement to deliver recommendations by January 2027.
Ukraine opens battlefield AI datasets to international partners — fire Point's $760M UAE investment collapses
Three converging signals define this period: Cabinet resolution grants access to millions of annotated combat UAV frames for AI training; Ukraine's Antimonopoly Committee rejected EDGE Group's bid for 30% of rocket manufacturer Fire Point amid corruption investigations; BaBayte secured US funding for autonomous threat detection as Russian forces destroyed 1.
Ukraine shifts from aid recipient to industrial co-producer — NATO-standard regulatory infrastructure creates Western market access
Three converging signals define this period: France (SAMP/T, Aster missiles), Poland (Bohdana howitzers JV), and UK (Rapid Ranger tech transfer) signed joint production agreements this week; Ukraine finalised its eighth mutual quality assurance agreement (Finland) with five more EU/NATO countries negotiating; Poland's €43.7bn SAFE allocation (largest in EU) must contract by May 2026.
Ukraine pivots to defence exporter as Gulf states seek counter-drone systems — Polish €43.7bn SAFE sprint opens two-month window
Three converging signals mark a structural shift: Zelenskyy ordered counter-drone packages for five Gulf states, leveraging ~90% interception rates against Iranian Shaheds to unlock export revenue and PAC-3 swaps. Poland secured €43.7bn in SAFE loans with a May 2026 contract deadline, creating a procurement sprint favouring Ukrainian startups with Polish partnerships. Fire Point's FP-5 Flamingo struck Votkinsk at 1,400km — Ukraine's first indigenous strategic strike on a Russian defence industrial target.
Pentagon validates EU protectionism with Ukrainian inclusion — funding supercycle accelerates
Four converging signals confirm structural acceleration: Under Secretary Colby endorsed the EU's €150bn procurement loan with explicit Ukrainian content preference, eliminating the primary political risk to the thesis. Swarmer's Nasdaq IPO filing validated the public market pathway for Ukrainian defence tech. Ukraine unblocked defence exports to 28 countries. Funding hit $129M in 2025 — 19× three-year growth.