A PowerPoint presentation prepared by Ukrainian defense officials last August contained a specific warning: Iran was improving its Shahed one-way-attack drone design, and American bases in West Asia were at growing risk. US officials saw this presentation. They chose not to act on its recommendations. The warning has since been validated by Iranian drone attacks that have killed seven American soldiers.
The context of Ukraine’s warning was critical. Kyiv had been fighting Iranian-designed drones deployed by Russia for years and had developed an acute understanding of how the Shahed platform evolved over time. The warning embedded in the August briefing was not speculation — it was based on observed developments in drone design and deployment that Ukrainian defense analysts had been tracking closely.
The proposal that accompanied the warning was similarly grounded. Ukraine recommended establishing drone combat hubs at American base locations in Jordan, Turkey, and Gulf states, combining Ukrainian interceptor technology with local operational capacity. The concept was designed to create an affordable, scalable defense against mass drone attacks — precisely the attack profile Iran has since employed.
The failure to adopt the proposal is now recognized within US government circles as the most significant pre-conflict error. One official explicitly described it as the central tactical mistake made before the war began. The assessment is rare in its candor and accurate in its framing — the evidence is now written in casualties and defense spending figures.
Ukraine’s response to the eventual US request demonstrates how quickly the proposed architecture could have been assembled. Specialists deployed within 24 hours. Teams are active in Jordan and Gulf states. The drone combat hub concept is being implemented today, under fire, eight months after it was first proposed from a Washington meeting room.