President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has framed Ukraine’s wartime experience as a warning that the world must take seriously. The proliferation of Iranian Shahed drones from Ukraine’s battlefields to the Middle East demonstrates, he argued, that this threat is not contained — it is spreading. And as he announced that Ukraine would help US and regional allies counter the drones, he called on the international community to recognize the urgency of the challenge.
Zelenskyy confirmed conversations with leaders from the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait about defense cooperation, and stated that a formal US request for Ukrainian drone defense assistance had been fulfilled. He framed Ukraine’s offer not just as bilateral support but as a contribution to a broader international effort to contain the Shahed drone threat before it destabilizes yet more regions.
The warning is grounded in data. Russia has launched tens of thousands of Shaheds at Ukraine — at one point more than 800 in a single night — and the campaign has continued unabated for four years. The weapons were supplied by Iran, demonstrating a well-established proliferation pipeline that has already reached multiple continents. Countries that believe themselves immune to this threat may need to reconsider.
Ukraine’s response to the proliferation challenge is both immediate and systemic. Its interceptors, costing as little as $1,000 per unit, offer a practical solution to the problem of Shahed attacks. But Zelenskyy’s broader message is that the world needs to address the supply chain that makes these attacks possible — starting with the Iran-Russia partnership that is fueling conflicts in both Ukraine and the Middle East simultaneously.
Zelenskyy acknowledged that the current crisis has disrupted peace talks between Russia and Ukraine. But he argued that addressing the drone proliferation problem — by supporting Ukraine’s resistance, countering Iran’s influence, and building effective international defense partnerships — is the best path to both regional stability and a just end to the war in Europe.
