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A soldier from the Khanter (Hunter) group of Ukraine's 208th Khersonska Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade prepares an interceptor drone for launch as the unit carries out combat missions in one direction in Ukraine on March 4, 2026.
Ukraine is allowing private companies to join in air defense operations as Russian drone launches increase.
  • Ukraine has launched a new initiative that allows private companies to participate in air defense.
  • More than two dozen companies have already joined, with some already intercepting Russian drones.
  • The initiative comes in response to growing Russian drone attacks against Ukraine.

Ukraine’s military is letting private companies join in the air defense fight as Russia bombards the country with a growing number of attack drones.

Twenty-seven Ukrainian companies from across the country have already joined the first-of-its-kind initiative, an experimental program that allows them to form their own air defense units. Some of them have already logged combat missions.

Ukrainian Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov recently told reporters during an update meeting that the number of companies applying to join the program is growing weekly. He said there’s a “strong business interest in this initiative, which provides an additional means of protecting personnel and industrial capacity.”

The companies are at different readiness levels. Some are training personnel or receiving explosives and small arms from the Ukrainian military, while others are procuring technology such as interceptor drones, electronic warfare systems, radars, and gun turrets.

Fedorov said two companies’ air defense units are already conducting combat operations in the Kharkiv and Odesa regions, working in coordination with the Ukrainian Air Force.

These units have shot down roughly 20 Russian one-way attack drones and reconnaissance drones, including at least one newer Shahed-type drone powered by a jet engine.

A mobile fire group with a machine gun and the MANPADS "Stinger" from the air defense of the 1129th Anti-Aircraft Missile Biletskyi Regiment during the defense of the Kyiv region against "Shaheds" and cruise missiles on October 29, 2025, in the Kyiv region, Ukraine.
Russia has invested heavily in expanding its deadly attack drone operations.

“In the near future, several more enterprise-based air defense units will assume combat duty,” Fedorov said, adding that these private air defense units must seek approval from Ukraine’s military before taking up arms.

The development of a private Ukrainian air defense initiative comes as Russia increasingly invests in expanding its drone operations by ramping up production and building out launch sites.

Russia can produce thousands of Shahed-style attack drones each month, fueling heavy barrages. It launched more than 6,500 in April with a daily rate of 219, compared to 208 in March and 203 in July 2025, according to data collected by the Institute for Science and International Security, a US think tank.

In response to the uptick in launches, Ukraine has made it a priority to strengthen its short-range air defense umbrella. Including private companies in its defense falls under these efforts, as do other initiatives, such as more than doubling the procurement of interceptor drones during the first four months of 2026.

Fedorov said the share of Shaheds taken down by interceptor drones has doubled during this time period, “even as the number of Shahed launches by Russia has increased by 35% monthly.”

He described Ukraine’s push to improve its air defense as a “systemic effort,” aiming for a 95% interception rate of Russian aircraft.

Read the original article on Business Insider

 

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