China’s Sanctions Hit Europe’s Emerging Drone Doctrine |
China Power | Security | East Asia
China’s Sanctions Hit Europe’s Emerging Drone Doctrine
Several European countries have been quietly developing a new drone doctrine built on both Ukraine’s battlefield experience and Taiwan’s high-tech components. China is trying to sever that link.
Various drones and weapons on display at the Taipei International Aerospace and Defense Industry Exhibition at the Nangang Exhibition Center in Taipei, Taiwan, Sep. 20, 2025.
On April 24, China’s Commerce Ministry banned exports of dual-use items to seven European entities, placing them on its export control list. The stated reason: “arms sales to or collusion with Taiwan.” Those sanctioned include Germany’s Hensoldt AG, Belgian arms manufacturers FN Herstal and FN Browning, and four Czech companies: Excalibur Army, Omnipol, VZLU Aerospace, and SpaceKnow.
By restricting European defense companies cooperating with Taiwan, Beijing is doing more than enforcing its One China Principle. It is severing Europe’s access to a valuable combination: Ukraine’s battlefield drone know-how and Taiwan’s high-tech components. Together, the Ukraine-Taiwan link offers a cheap, scalable war doctrine Europe increasingly needs.
The move came just days after the head of the European Parliament’s security committee visited Taipei – a sign the EU is aware of Taiwan’s importance for European defense.
Several European countries have been quietly developing a new drone doctrine built on both Ukraine’s battlefield experience – accumulated over four years of war – and Taiwan’s high-tech components, including chips, batteries, and motors sourced outside Chinese supply chains.
Ukraine’s war has rewritten the fundamentals of aerial warfare. Development cycles for drones have been reduced from months to as little as four to six weeks through decentralized procurement, direct frontline feedback, and a manufacturing logic that treats battlefield data as real-time engineering input. This stands in stark contrast to the costly approach used by the United States in its conflict with Iran, where million-dollar Patriot missiles were fired to intercept cheap Shahed drones.
Taiwan has become a critical node in sustaining the creation of new war doctrine. Taiwanese firms provide components that both Ukraine and Europe urgently need to source outside China. According to a March 2026 report in The Economist, Taiwan’s drone export sector has grown 749 percent year-on-year. Exports to Czechia alone rose from negligible levels to approximately 20,000 units per month in October 2025, before doubling again to 40,000 by January 2026. Poland is among the other active recipients – partly to facilitate transfers to Ukraine, and partly for its own military use. The surge in demand is leading to a drone-related renaissance in Taiwan, which now hosts 270 drone-related companies.
This is not merely commercial cooperation, however. On March 28, a Ukrainian combat veteran – whose rank was withheld for security reasons – addressed Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan alongside drone and disinformation experts. The event, co-organized by the Liberal Democratic League of Ukraine, saw Ukraine’s battlefield experience being directly shared with Taiwan’s parliament.
On April 23 – one day before Beijing’s sanctions announcement – another drone related event took place in Taipei. The Research Institute for Democracy, Society, and Emerging Technology (DSET), a national think tank established under the National Science and Technology Council, launched two new research reports: “Drone........