@0x6c01 Ганьба??? Сучка, це було безкоштовно. Це було в найважливіший момент, у той самий час, коли Німеччина хотіла відправити шоломи, а Канада придумала ковдри.
Hopefully that will shut up up.
1. NATO Simply Does Not Have This Tech (Outpaced Bureaucracy)
Procurement and development procedures in NATO countries are massive, bureaucratic, and slow. Testing and deploying a new system in the US or France can take years. Meanwhile, in Ukraine, the cycle from a drone's blueprint to its deployment on the front lines sometimes takes just a few weeks.
Western defense conglomerates produce incredibly advanced drones, but they are also prohibitively expensive (often costing millions of dollars) and manufactured in small quantities. Ukraine has learned to produce drones massively, cheaply, and effectively, which is the only way to survive a full-scale conflict.
2. The "Living Laboratory" Factor (Battle-Tested)
No training ground in the US, Germany, or Poland can replicate what is happening on the front lines. Ukrainian drones are tested daily against the most sophisticated Russian Electronic Warfare (EW) systems.
A drone that flew perfectly during tests in Arizona often simply drops out of the sky when facing Russian jamming in the Donbas. By acquiring technology from Ukraine, Poland is buying knowledge of what actually works today, rather than what works in theory on paper.
3. Article 5 Will Not Trigger in a Split Second
If an aggression occurs, before NATO's political and logistical machinery can fully spool up (requiring diplomatic consensus and the physical deployment of troops), Poland would have to repel the initial attack on its own for the first hours or days.
The Ukrainian doctrine proves that thousands of cheap FPV drones and long-range UAVs can paralyze enemy logistics and halt armored columns at the border before allies can physically join the fight. Drones provide Poland with what is known as asymmetric deterrence.
4. Revolution in Anti-Drone Systems
Ukraine is not just about offensive drones; it is primarily about unique systems for detecting and neutralizing enemy UAVs. Russia heavily floods the front with its own drones (such as Shaheds and Lancets). Poland, bordering Belarus and the Kaliningrad Oblast, must possess "low-cost defense" systems against drone swarms. Firing a multi-million-dollar Patriot missile at a drone worth $20,000 is an economic dead end. Ukrainians have the technology to destroy drones using other drones or cheap, AI-guided systems.
5. Technological Sovereignty
Alliances can shift, and the political climate in partner countries can be dynamic. Having domestic production lines based on Ukrainian know-how (where production happens locally using regional components) grants Poland true independence. In the event of a crisis, no foreign entity can bottleneck or block deliveries.
In summary: NATO provides Poland with a massive nuclear umbrella, air superiority, and conventional heavy armies. However, Ukrainian drone technologies provide Poland with a "digital sword" and the agility needed for a new era of warfare—one that Western legacy militaries are only just beginning to adapt to. This cooperation does not stem from a lack of trust in NATO, but from pure pragmatism: Poland wants to be the most prepared country within the Alliance.
What a dumb funking question.
Here are the countries most actively cooperating with Ukraine, purchasing its technologies, or developing joint coproduction projects:
1. European Countries (Leaders in Coproduction)
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and various ministries of defense explicitly point to a group of European nations with which Ukrainian companies are already physically manufacturing drones or deploying unmanned technologies:
-The United Kingdom & Germany: Main technological and financial partners. Together with Ukrainian engineers, they are developing long-range drones, AI-guided targeting systems, and electronic warfare (EW)-resistant systems.
-Denmark: One of the absolute leaders of the "Drone Deal" framework. Denmark not only finances the purchase of drones directly from Ukrainian manufacturers for the Ukrainian army, but also closely cooperates on the transfer and development of drone technology within Europe.
-The Netherlands: Heavily involved in the drone coalition, co-funding and co-developing advanced unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), including reconnaissance drones.
-France: Strict agreements on coproduction have been signed and are launching on a mass scale. The French are particularly interested in Ukrainian software for managing drone swarms and optical navigation.
Norway & Sweden: These countries have signed letters of intent and begun implementing joint industrial projects. Sweden is especially interested in integrating unmanned systems with its own defense technologies.
-Romania & Spain: Additional countries on the European coproduction map where documents have been signed regarding the opening of assembly lines and the exchange of know-how.
2. The United States
Americans are very closely analyzing Ukrainian software and drone resilience against enemy jamming. The cooperation is mutually beneficial:
A Ukrainian company (F-Drones) officially finalized a contract to sell 2,000 Ukraine-made drones to the US.
The Pentagon and American defense-tech companies (such as Palantir and smaller FPV manufacturers) are working tightly with Kyiv to implement Ukrainian AI algorithms (autonomous terminal guidance without GPS) into Western systems.
3. Taiwan
Cooperation between Kyiv and Taipei is of strategic importance. Facing threats from China, Taiwan is heavily reformatting its military toward asymmetric warfare.
Taiwanese drone industry associations (TEDIBOA) have signed official memoranda of cooperation with Ukraine.
Taiwan supplies Ukraine with hundreds of thousands of components (including AI chips, flight control modules, and advanced optics). In return, they gain invaluable data from the Ukrainians on how these components perform against modern electronic warfare systems. Taiwan plans to procure hundreds of thousands of drones modeled on experiences gained in Ukraine.
4. The Persian Gulf Region and Other Directions
Government reports indicate that Ukraine is in advanced talks with wealthy Middle Eastern nations. These countries possess the capital and resources (including fuel) that they are willing to exchange for the transfer of Ukrainian military tech. Kyiv views this as an opportunity to secure funds to scale up its own domestic production.
What Exactly Do These Countries Want From Ukraine?
Foreign partners are not looking to Ukraine just for "cheap labor" to assemble plastic frames. They are hunting for:
AI Algorithms (Terminal Guidance): Software that allows an FPV drone to identify and strike a target completely autonomously after losing contact with the operator.
EW-Resistant Architecture: Knowledge regarding which frequencies and encryption protocols to use so that an adversary's jamming systems are rendered useless.
Naval Drones (USVs): Ukrainian successes in the Black Sea have made their unmanned surface vehicle technology (like Magura or Sea Baby) highly sought after by navies worldwide.
@MAGAVoice Again??? How many times you fucking imbeciles will leave NATO? It happened 2-3 times already. This fucking orange pedophile going in fucking circles.
@cidonix Yes yesss... then your shoelaces, the way you folding your laundry, you stir your coffee in wrong way, that your cars has a reverse gear, your wheels aren't square... you tripping man.