New €10M grant initiative will unite Ukrainian and NATO industry teams to accelerate breakthrough defenses—from counter-UAS systems to resilient battlefield comms—in response to evolving Russian threats
BRUSSELS | Ukraine and NATO have jointly unveiled a major defense innovation initiative designed to accelerate the development of advanced counter-drone technologies, secure battlefield communications, and other high-priority capabilities urgently needed on the front lines of the Ukraine–Russia war.
The new program, UNITE–Brave NATO, will launch a pilot competition in early 2026, offering grants to industry teams drawn from both Ukraine and NATO member states. The effort aims to bring emerging technologies directly from prototype to battlefield deployment—and to strengthen long-term interoperability between Ukrainian forces and the Alliance.
According to a Wednesday announcement, the first round of funding will total €10 million, split evenly between NATO’s Comprehensive Assistance Package for Ukraine (CAP) and Ukraine’s Ministry of Digital Transformation. If initial results prove successful, partners expect funding to grow to €50 million by 2026, marking one of the largest joint tech-development investments since Russia’s 2022 invasion.
Counter-UAS and Secure Comms Top Priority List
The launch comes as Ukraine continues to defend against saturation drone attacks, long-range strikes, and increasingly sophisticated Russian electronic warfare.
The program will prioritize:
- Counter-drone systems capable of detecting, tracking, and neutralizing Russian UAVs
- Secure and resilient battlefield communications resistant to jamming
- Signals intelligence (SIGINT) applications
- Uncrewed ground systems for logistics and reconnaissance
- Navigation tools robust against GPS denial and electromagnetic disruption
These technology areas “reflect the operational realities on the battlefield today,” NATO officials said—where small drones, electronic warfare, and precision strike capabilities are shaping tactics as dramatically as artillery did in past conflicts.

