The Ukrainian ambassador to the United States has said that it is important for Ukraine to show that it can offer not just "concern or condolences", but immediate action following the launch of Operation Epic Fury.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that 11 countries have asked for help in countering Iranian drones being fired by Tehran in retaliation for US-Israeli strikes.
He said some Ukrainian drone experts are already en route to the Middle East and are due there this week.
Speaking at the Ukrainian Embassy in Washington DC last night, Olha Stefanishyna told reporters that the support Ukraine is offering is aimed at helping secure cities and save lives.
Ukraine has, what it describes as, hard-won experience, as Russia was an early adopter of Iranian drones.
"These Shahed drones were developed and shipped to the Russian Federation deliberately to attack and target cities to kill civilians ... and this is the same technology which was used after the beginning of the operation in Iran," Ms Stefanishyna said.
Since the US-Israeli operation began, Iran has launched more than 1,500 drones.
Most have been intercepted by air defences, however, six US service members were killed in a drone strike in Kuwait on 1 March.
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The US military has also been using expensive US-made Patriot interceptor missiles to take them out.
Ambassador Stefanishyna was hosting 17 Ukrainian defence technology companies visiting Washington DC this week as part of a defence roadshow.
A representative of Brave 1, a Ukrainian government platform that brings together companies with ideas and developments that can be used to defend Ukraine, said Ukraine's counter-drone operations are the most cost-effective.
Iryna Zabolotna said that in February Ukraine intercepted more than 15,000 drones.
"That's why we do understand how to operate with such a huge amount of drones in the air.
"We don't use missiles, we use interceptors, and they are more like in financial way wise, because it costs approximately $5,000 to $15,000 per each interceptor" she told RTÉ News.
Pentagon officials reportedly told US politicians last week that waves of Iranian-launched drones are punching through air defences.
Last night President Donald Trump claimed that Iranian drones are being "blown up all over the place" including at their manufacturing sites.
Russian drones injure 20 in Ukraine's Kharkiv, Dnipro
Meanwhile, Russian drones attacked Ukraine's second-largest city, Kharkiv, and the southeastern city of Dnipro late yesterday and overnight, injuring more than 20 people, Ukrainian officials said.
A Russian drone struck an area near a high-rise apartment building late yesterday in Kharkiv, injuring seven people, smashing windows and setting cars ablaze, the city's mayor and Ukrainian police said.
A second attack overnight injured four people, when a drone hit a road between buildings, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said on the Telegram messaging app.
Kharkiv, located 30km from the Russian border, withstood early advances by Russian forces after their full-scale invasion in February 2022 and has since been a frequent target of Russian air attacks.
Ukraine's air force said that overall Russia attacked the country with 137 drones, of which 122 were downed or neutralised.
In Dnipro, ten people were injured, including a 12-year-old boy, regional Governor Oleksandr Ganzha said on Telegram.
Mr Ganzha posted photos online showing rubble in streets and damaged building facades.
City Mayor Borys Filatov said that at least eight high-rise buildings were damaged in the attack.
Additional reporting Reuters