/ 06Field intelligence · Issue 10
Poland transforms Ukraine from aid recipient to strategic defence supplier
Executive summary
Poland transforms Ukraine from aid recipient to strategic defence supplier
Joint drone fleet initiative, Polish acquisition of Ukrainian counter-drone tech through SAFE programme, and ~€5.8bn 2026 procurement budget explicitly citing Ukrainian battlefield lessons validate technology export pathways into NATO supply chains worth tens of billions annually.
EU defence procurement architecture now structurally favours Ukrainian firms
EDIP's €1.5bn programme mandates 65% EU/EEA content with dedicated €300m Ukraine support instrument, whilst Brussels signals willingness to expand €90bn package if Ukraine provides costed procurement plan; Poland-Ukraine co-production model creates template for battlefield-proven tech to access European markets.
Wild Hornets and Fire Point demonstrate Brave1 ecosystem maturation
Wild Hornets' STING interceptor accounts for ~70% of Shahed kills with serial deployment validated by MOD, whilst Fire Point publicly displayed FP-7/FP-9 ballistic missiles (200-855km range) with 2026 codification expected; Ukraine's 50,000 UGV procurement target and doubled Q1 interceptor deliveries create massive domestic demand.
Counter-drone electronic warfare reaches industrial procurement scale
U.S. Marines' $9.5m urgent SteelRock contract, Poland's 25bn złoty C-UAS budget with 36 systems in trials, and Hyundai's K2PL tank dual-layer counter-drone upgrade signal NATO-wide adoption of Ukrainian-validated technologies with multi-billion dollar NATO procurement pathways opening.
Top signals
/ 01
Poland-Ukraine joint defence industrial model creates immediate export revenue pathway
What happened
Poland announced joint drone fleet initiative combining Polish/EU financing with Ukrainian combat expertise, with SAFE programme directly acquiring Ukrainian drone technologies for Polish forces rather than providing cash aid. Poland allocated 25bn złoty (~€5.8bn) in 2026 specifically for drone/counter-drone procurement explicitly citing Ukrainian battlefield lessons, with 36 systems already tested in combat-like conditions. Defence Minister Kosiniak-Kamysz stated Poland "wants to learn from Ukraine's battlefield success in drone production and swarm tactics."
Who is involved
Polish Ministry of Defence, Ukrainian defence industry (Fire Point displayed FP-7/FP-9 missiles at Polish security conference), SAFE programme administrators, EU institutions (financing via €90bn loan package).
/ 02
EU formalises regulatory tailwinds for Ukrainian defence tech market entry
What happened
European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP) codified "European preference" requiring 65% EU/EEA component value and banning adversarial-nation parts, backed by €1.5bn (2025-2027) with dedicated €300m Ukraine support instrument. EU Competition Commissioner announced relaxed merger rules to enable "European champions" formation. EU Defence Commissioner Kubilius signalled willingness to substantially increase funding beyond existing €90bn package if Ukraine provides costed "victory plan" with clear procurement requirements.
Who is involved
EU Defence Commissioner Andrius Kubilius, European Commission (EDIP programme administrators), Ukrainian government (required to submit victory plan for additional funding), three unidentified European countries contributing to Ukraine's PURL air defence programme.
/ 03
Wild Hornets and Fire Point demonstrate Brave1 ecosystem transition from R&D to serial production
What happened
Wild Hornets' STING interceptor now accounts for ~70% of turbofan Shahed kills according to OSINT data, with battlefield validation from 1020th Air Defence Regiment and Wings of OMEGA special unit. Ukraine's Ministry of Defence doubled interceptor drone deliveries in Q1 2026 versus all of 2025, establishing dedicated "small" air defence command with procurement through three parallel channels. Fire Point publicly displayed physical models of FP-7 (200km) and FP-9 (855km range, 800kg warhead) ballistic missiles at Polish conference, with FP-9 expected to undergo codification in 2026. President Zelenskyy mandated minimum 50,000 UGV procurement for 2026—more than double 2025 volumes.
Who is involved
Wild Hornets, Fire Point, Ukrainian Ministry of Defence, Defence Procurement Agency, Drone Army.Bonus programme, DOT-Chain marketplace, Polish security conference organisers (Żeżów).
/ 04
NATO counter-drone procurement validates Ukrainian electronic warfare technologies at scale
What happened
U.S. Marine Corps awarded UK startup SteelRock Technologies $9.5m urgent authority contract for NightFighter Mini RF jammers with 4-month delivery requirement. Poland allocated 25bn złoty (~€5.8bn) in 2026 for drone/counter-drone procurement under Shield East, with 36 solutions tested in combat-like conditions. Hyundai Rotem upgrading Poland's K2 tanks to K2PL variant with dual-layer counter-drone systems (soft-kill jamming + hard-kill RCWS) explicitly incorporating Ukrainian battlefield lessons. Germany's Bundeswehr awarded €300m framework contract for loitering munitions. U.S. Navy confirmed Ukraine's naval drone success is shaping Indo-Pacific unmanned maritime strategy through 2045.
Who is involved
U.S. Marine Corps, SteelRock Technologies, Polish Ministry of Defence (Shield East), Hyundai Rotem, German Bundeswehr, U.S. Navy, ThinKom Solutions (HPM demonstration), STARK and INLEAP Photonics (laser countermeasures), CRW Telesystem-Mesko/CONTROP (AI-enabled surveillance), Helsing (Eurofighter EW contract).
Looking ahead
Ukraine's costed "victory plan" submission to EU Commission
Brussels explicitly conditioned funding expansion beyond €90bn on receiving detailed procurement requirements from Kyiv; if submitted in May-June, could trigger multi-billion euro Ukraine-specific defence facility in Q3 2026 that would provide massive procurement visibility for portfolio companies.
Poland's SAFE programme tender specifications
--