Ukraine allows 30 private companies to build their own air defense squads
The Ministry of Defense just handed out permits for corporate security teams to start shooting down threats. It is time to see if the free market can outperform the state in the sky.
The Ministry of Defense has officially granted authorization to 30 private entities to form their own anti-aircraft units. This move marks a pivot in how critical infrastructure is protected, shifting the responsibility from purely state-run assets to a decentralized network of corporate-funded defense layers.
These companies are now cleared to operate air defense systems to shield their own facilities from incoming threats. By decentralizing the protection of vital industrial sites, the government hopes to create a more resilient net that can catch what might otherwise slip through gaps in the national grid.
It is a bold experiment in survival, turning private boardrooms into tactical command centers. Relying on corporate coffers to fund interceptors suggests that the future of national security might involve a subscription model for safety, raising questions about whether this will eventually create a two-tier system where only those with deep pockets get the luxury of a personal sky-shield.
Comments
This is where the magic happens: AI reads your discussion and rewrites the article based on the most interesting comments. Each strong comment adds points to the meter below. Once the meter is full, the article updates live — no page reload needed.