The United States military has begun using Ukrainian-developed anti-drone technology at a key US air base in Saudi Arabia, Reuters reported.

According to the report published on Wednesday, the Sky Map technology platform has been deployed at Prince Sultan Air Base, information that had not previously been publicly disclosed.

Ukrainian military personnel traveled to the base in recent weeks to train US forces in operating the system, which integrates data from radars and sensors into a single dashboard displaying maps and live video feeds to identify incoming threats.

The system was developed and refined during Russia’s war against Ukraine and is widely used by Ukrainian forces to detect and counter drone threats, including Iran-designed Shahed drones.

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The base has also tested Merops interceptor drones, developed by Project Eagle, a US company backed by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, however, encountered difficulties during early testing.

The deployment follows Ukraine’s signing of 10-year defense export agreements with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar, as Kyiv expands cooperation with Middle Eastern partners on drone warfare and integrated air-defense systems.

President Volodymyr Zelensky has previously said that Russian forces use satellite surveillance to monitor Western military facilities and share intelligence with Iran, a claim he has cited when warning of coordinated attacks on US and allied assets.

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In March, an Iranian missile attack damaged several aircraft at the base and destroyed a US E-3 Sentry early warning aircraft.

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