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Iran’s military drones are supplied by 2 Ukrainian companies dealing in aerospace parts, the US says

November 13, 2025
in News
Iran’s military drones are supplied by 2 Ukrainian companies dealing in aerospace parts, the US says
Iranians visit an exhibition showcasing its missiles and drones in Tehran.
The US has sanctioned 32 people and firms across the world that it says are supplying Iran’s ballistic missile and drone programs.

ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images

  • The US is sanctioning two Ukrainian companies in a crackdown against Iran’s drone program.
  • The two firms are accused of supplying aerospace parts to HESA, Iran’s state-owned drone maker.
  • HESA manufactures the Shahed-136, which Russia has been using to hammer Ukraine, and the Ababil UAV.

Two companies in Ukraine have been supplying an Iranian state-owned military manufacturer with key parts for drones, the US Treasury Department said on Wednesday.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control said in a statement that it was placing sanctions on GK Imperativ and Ekofera, two Ukraine-based companies.

The firms are accused of being fronts for Iranian procurement agents who were supplying aerospace parts to the Iran Aircraft Manufacturing Industrial Company, or HESA.

HESA designed and builds the Shahed-131 and Shahed-136, long-range loitering munitions that are being used heavily by Russia to attack Ukrainian cities.

A Shahed-116 drone is seen on display during a military showcase in late 2025.
The US said that Iran’s HESA is supplied by two companies in Ukraine that operate as fronts for Tehran’s agents.

ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images

However, the Treasury Department specifically highlighted HESA’s role in developing the Ababil-series uncrewed aerial vehicle, a low-cost, multi-role drone that can perform reconnaissance or attack missions. Iran-aligned militant groups such as Hamas, the Houthis, and Hezbollah are known to use these drones.

The Treasury Department’s announcement said that GK Imperativ and Ekofera helped Iran obtain parts such as attitude indicators, which aid an aircraft in ascertaining the angle of its nose, and magnetometers, which identify and measure magnetic fields.

Three agents in Iran — Bahram Tabibi, Batoul Shafiei, and Saeed Pahlavani Nejad — worked with the Ukrainian companies to establish a network that sold alternator components, engines, sensors, and other parts to Iran, the statement added.

GK Imperativ is listed in Ukrainian business directories as established in 2018, based in Kharkiv, and owned by Tabibi Jabali Bahram. Its listing describes the company as handling chemicals and construction materials.

Ekofera, also known as Econsfera, translates to “Ecosphere” in English. The firm is listed as having been established in 2016, with offices in Kharkiv and Kyiv, and is described as a consultancy and an intermediary for wholesale goods and machinery.

Business Insider’s calls to both companies went unanswered.

The Treasury Department said it was placing the trio of agents and the two Ukrainian firms on the US sanctions list under Executive Order 13382, which “targets weapons of mass destruction proliferators and their supporters.”

“The United States also expects the international community to fully implement UN snapback sanctions on Iran to cut off its access to the global financial system,” said John Hurley, the undersecretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, in the statement.

The announcement was part of a larger sanctions list that covered 32 people and companies in the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Germany, China, Hong Kong, India, and Ukraine.

All are accused of “supporting Iran’s ballistic missile and unmanned aerial vehicle production,” the department said.

While Iran’s HESA is the designer of the Shahed variants that Russia regularly deploys, the Kremlin is locally producing thousands of the drones, which are also referred to as Gerans.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Iran’s military drones are supplied by 2 Ukrainian companies dealing in aerospace parts, the US says appeared first on Business Insider.

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