Ukraine opens controlled weapons exports for the first time since the 2022 invasion
Cabinet-approved mechanism lets manufacturers sell to 27 Drone Deal partner countries, provided domestic military supply is guaranteed first; 20% of proceeds go to a state defence-industrial fund
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Summary
Ukraine's Cabinet of Ministers approved a mechanism July 1 allowing controlled weapons exports for the first time since Russia's February 2022 full-scale invasion began. Defence Minister Mykhailo Fedorov announced the scheme, which permits manufacturers to sell to the 27 states that are party to the existing Drone Deal framework, including 15 NATO members. The hard condition is that Ukrainian Armed Forces' needs must be guaranteed first; exports can be blocked if the state requires a particular system. Manufacturers receive 20-30% of proceeds into a new state defence-industrial fund. The ministry of foreign affairs designates which states may buy; the ministry of defence lists what cannot be sold. Ten export centres are to open across Europe.
Why it matters
The step integrates Ukraine's war-enlarged defence industry into NATO Alliance supply chains and creates a revenue stream for reinvestment in domestic production. For partner states that have sent weapons to Ukraine and drawn down their own stockpiles, buying Ukrainian-made systems is a faster and cheaper replenishment path than waiting for domestic orders from Rheinmetall or BAE. It also cements Ukraine's position as a legitimate arms exporter rather than a pure aid recipient, a symbolic as well as commercial shift.
What to watch
- Which systems become available first (likely FPV drones and counter-UAS kits) and at what price points against Western competitors.
- Whether Ukraine's first export contracts generate political friction with NATO allies who have their own defence-industrial interests in the same product lines.
- How Russia frames the exports diplomatically, and whether it targets the European export centres.