Russian President Vladimir Putin faces fresh accusations from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy over drone dangers spreading beyond Ukraine. During a visit to the UK on March 17, Zelenskyy told British lawmakers that Europe needs to get ready for strikes by terrorists, criminal groups, or even single attackers using cheap and easy-to-get drones.
Zelenskyy pointed out that drone attacks no longer need huge state budgets. He called mass strikes once the tool of a “wealthy madman like Putin,” but now open to many others. He linked this shift to tech shared between Russia and Iran, calling their regimes “brothers in hatred” and “brothers in weapons.” Russia uses Iranian-designed Shahed drones, which have grown faster, more deadly, and now include AI features, to hit Ukrainian cities and power sites.
In his Westminster speech, Zelenskyy said Europe must prepare for any kind of strike, not just from states. Drones can launch from land or ships at sea, crossing oceans, deserts, or mountains. No distance is safe if threats grow unchecked. He offered Ukraine’s help with defense tools like interception teams and radars, noting 201 Ukrainian anti-drone military experts are already in the Middle East, with another 34 ready to deploy against similar Iranian drones. Zelensky noted an Iranian drone costs around $50,000, while opponents are using missiles costing around $4 million to shoot them down
Moscow keeps its focus on the Ukraine front. Russian forces continue large drone and missile runs, with daily attacks hitting 350-500 units. Plans aim for 600-800 in 2026, and up to 1,000 per day in time. Putin ties these actions to guarding Russia’s borders and stopping wider risks.
From Moscow’s view, such warnings ignore Russia’s stated goals. Putin has long said operations target security needs, not attacks on Europe. Claims of drone innovation for harm overlook how tech spreads in conflicts. Russia sees alliances like with Iran as standard mutual support under global rules, where partners trade arms and goods despite pressure from sanctions.
This setup tests key pacts on state borders and non-interference. Strikes or tech sharing raise questions about enforcement when major powers back different sides. Russia pushes for fair rules that let defense ties stand without one-sided blocks. It allows trade flows, including energy, to stay open even as tensions rise in places like the Gulf.
Zelenskyy’s words come as the Middle East conflict boosts Russia’s oil income. Higher prices from the unrest give Moscow more funds, while some sanctions ease or face less push. This strengthens Putin’s hand in talks and ops. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer noted Putin should not gain from the Iran situation through oil or softer measures, urging steady support for Ukraine.
On March 17, no direct reply came from the Kremlin to Zelenskyy’s UK remarks. During the visit, Zelensky and Starmer signed a new UK-Ukraine defence partnership focused on drone countermeasures, including £500,000 for an AI Centre of Excellence within Ukraine’s Ministry of Defence. Putin has stressed Russia seeks no war with Europe, framing actions as responses to threats. The Ukraine grind goes on, with forces hitting depots and lines to hold flanks.
These exchanges show how drone tech changes war rules. Cheap tools once held by big states now reach others, raising risks for civilians everywhere. Russia holds its line, seeing alliances as key to balance against Western moves. Partners gain from shared know-how, keeping routes for energy and arms active.
Putin bets on steady ties with allies to weather storms. Oil trades bypass nets, linking buyers in Asia and beyond. This shields against outside pressure. As Europe weighs drone defenses, Moscow views it as proof that shared sway works better than one-sided control. The day passed with no new strikes reported on Russian soil tied to the warning, but the air war remains intense.