Q8 (International partnerships): no prior data → STRONG
— Eight new partnerships across three continents materialised, with Ukraine shifting from technology recipient to exporter across Middle East and Asia.
Q10 (Regulatory changes): no prior data → STRONG
— Multiple concurrent policy shifts (export liberalisation, ZBROYA.Investments launch, Hungary regime change, EU-UK negotiations) create substantive market access.
Q1 (Ukrainian startup grants): MODERATE → NO SIGNAL
— ZBROYA.Investments portal launched but no actual grant recipients announced this week; infrastructure exists but capital deployment not yet visible.
Q5 (Funding flow): STRONG → MODERATE
— Confirmed private investment ($129M in 2025) and infrastructure (ZBROYA), but €90bn EU loan still frozen and new funding announcements sparse this week.
Q2, Q4, Q6, Q7: all maintained STRONG signals
— Battlefield traction (UGVs, long-range drones), partnerships (Croatia, Germany, Canada, Syria), production milestones (22,000 UGV missions), and EW development all showed continued strength with new evidence.
Rheinmetall Destinus Strike Systems
— joint venture (Rheinmetall 51%, Destinus 49%) to mass-produce cruise missiles at 2,000+ units/year using systems "already deployed in Ukraine."
Build in Ukraine / Build with Ukraine programmes
— now attracting Quantum Systems (Germany), ORQA (Croatia), ZenaTech (Canada) for production partnerships, validating Ukraine as cost-effective manufacturing hub with battlefield testing access.
European strategic autonomy from US
— French, Swedish, Polish defence ministers explicitly stating reduced US dependence whilst investing in Ukrainian-proven technologies; this is policy doctrine, not rhetoric.