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Nico Woods
Defense Industry Advisor - Ukraine | CEO | Stanford MBA | Former Nuclear Submarine Officer
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February 27, 2025
While supporting Ukraine in its fight for survival, I've seen firsthand how meaningful U.S.-Ukrainian defense partnerships create mutual benefits for both nations. Living in Kyiv during Russia's full-scale invasion has given me a unique perspective on this relationship. Ukraine gains vital capabilities to defend its sovereignty while American businesses forge valuable partnerships that strengthen our industrial base. These collaborations are creating: ✅ Innovation exchanges - Ukrainian battlefield insights driving American technology evolution, while U.S. systems help Ukraine defend its people and territory ✅ Manufacturing relationships - Joint production initiatives that respect Ukraine's immediate defense needs while creating opportunities for American companies ✅ Shared expertise - Knowledge transfer benefiting both Ukrainian defenders and U.S. industrial capabilities These partnerships help Ukraine maintain its independence against Russian aggression while simultaneously strengthening America's industrial readiness and competitiveness. Ukrainian perseverance inspires us all, and working together strengthens both our nations. I recently wrote more about this topic in the #KyivPost. Would appreciate your thoughts. #DefenseIndustry #USUkrainePartnership #StrategicCooperation #Ukraine https://lnkd.in/eZfpJTpN
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February 27, 2025
The Danish Model: A Transformative Approach for European Support to Ukraine's Defense Industry Leadership in defense cooperation means rethinking how we provide support. Denmark’s approach is setting a new standard that European partners can adopt as they fulfill their pledges for increased defense spending on Ukraine. The Danish Model is a financing mechanism where partner countries pay for weapons production in Ukraine through a reimbursement system—covering costs after they’ve been incurred. Unlike traditional military aid, this model allows Ukraine to prioritize their most needed items while offering the flexibility to the donor country to choose a capability that aligns with their foreign policies. This keeps decision-making in Ukraine's hands, ensuring resources go where they're needed most. What makes this model different? ✅ Efficiency – Funding is allocated based on real operational needs, not donor constraints. ✅ Self-Sufficiency – Strengthens Ukraine’s defense industry rather than just supplying finished weapons. ✅ Transparency – European partner nations conduct oversight to ensure funds are used effectively, with payment only made after the Ukrainian army has formally accepted the items and attested they meet operational and quality assurance standards. But this model isn’t just beneficial for Ukraine—it presents opportunities for the U.S. as well: 🔹 Direct Impact – Investments directly strengthen Ukraine's defense industrial capacity while addressing immediate needs. 🔹 Value Alignment – A proven framework for European partners to demonstrate their commitment to Ukraine's sovereignty. 🔹 Long-term Investment – Building Ukraine's defense industrial base creates a more resilient security partner integrated with European standards. This isn’t just a funding model—it’s a strategic shift toward sustainable defense partnerships. Stay tuned as I break down other models and explore what’s next in defense cooperation. #DefenseLeadership #SecurityStrategy #InternationalCooperation #DefenseInnovation
9 comments
March 20, 2025
Everyone's wrong about Ukraine's defense industry. While America debates, Europe's locking up tomorrow's capabilities. I just got back from Tech Force in UA's forum in Lviv and what I saw changed everything. Ukrainian startups are building weapons faster than Lockheed Martin, and this is not hyperbole. They push 16 product iterations while traditional, large defense prime contractors deliberate whether the time is suitable to enter Ukraine. Let’s look at the numbers:  ❗ €4 billion projected revenue (218% growth) 🏭 75% of companies didn't exist before 2022 ⏱️ 3 months to operational production (vs. 3-5 years in the West) Here's what floored me: These founders collect battlefield feedback DAILY. Their reality is that the customer dies if the product fails. No procurement officers. No PowerPoints. Just brutal, immediate truth. Teams of twenty-somethings outpacing billion-dollar R&D departments. They've replaced our entire development cycle with WhatsApp messages at the warfront. Meanwhile, Western defense contractors are still arguing about requirement documents. And to make it worse, export restrictions keep 55% of the Ukrainian defense company’s capacity idle. Self-imposed export restrictions are literally preventing innovation that could save allied lives because of bureaucracy. Denmark gets it. The UK gets it. Germany gets it. They all had booths soliciting for partnerships. My prediction: In 5 years, you'll either partner with Ukrainian defense tech or compete against someone who did. The future of defense isn't in Arlington boardrooms. It's in Ukrainian workshops. Agree or disagree? #Defense #Ukraine #Innovation #Technology #Future #TFUA
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September 4, 2025