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The Moment Volodymyr Zelensky Became a Global Arms Dealer and Why It Makes Complete Sense
Zelensky is now personally conducting weapons deals with Gulf states while his own country is at war. Here is why this transformation makes strategic sense and what it tells us about Ukraine's future.
Zelensky is now personally conducting weapons deals with Gulf states while his own country is at war. Here is why this transformation makes strategic sense and what it tells us about Ukraine's future.
- Zelensky is now personally conducting weapons deals with Gulf states while his own country is at war.
- The image of Volodymyr Zelensky conducting arms deals with Gulf monarchies while Ukraine's military is defending against Russian attacks might, in a different context, seem paradoxical.
- Zelensky's transformation from actor-politician defending his country into a global security salesman was not a choice driven by vanity or distraction.
Zelensky is now personally conducting weapons deals with Gulf states while his own country is at war.
The image of Volodymyr Zelensky conducting arms deals with Gulf monarchies while Ukraine's military is defending against Russian attacks might, in a different context, seem paradoxical. In the context of March 2026, it is one of the most strategically coherent moves of his presidency.
Zelensky's transformation from actor-politician defending his country into a global security salesman was not a choice driven by vanity or distraction. It is a direct response to the strategic reality that Ukraine faces: a war that will not end soon, a Western alliance whose support is both essential and uncertain, and a need to build the kind of diversified international relationships that give Ukraine leverage against the possibility of reduced Western backing.
The Gulf states offer Ukraine specific benefits that Western European governments are not fully providing. First, they are willing to pay — Ukraine's defence technology is available to Gulf states on commercial terms that generate revenue for Ukraine's defence industrial base without political preconditions. Second, they are outside the political constraints that limit European defence assistance — a Gulf state purchasing Ukrainian drone technology has not made promises to Russia about avoiding escalatory behaviour that European governments feel bound by. Third, their security interests are directly aligned with Ukraine's current capabilities — they face the same Iranian drone and missile systems that Ukraine has spent four years developing responses to.
The Hormuz dimension connects Ukraine's Gulf relationships directly to European energy security in a way that gives Zelensky diplomatic leverage in European capitals as well. An Ukraine that actively contributes to resolving Europe's energy crisis — through maritime technology that helps restore Hormuz passage — is an Ukraine that can reasonably expect European support to continue regardless of the political headwinds from the Rubio comments or the US weapons diversion suggestion.