This data is collected from Ukraine's Defense Forces, Defense Intelligence (HUR), Security Service (SBU), and scientific institutions that have been analyzing captured hardware since the beginning of the full-scale war in 2022 . One source notes the catalog is backed by 225 separate analyses
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Access is not public — it is restricted to verified users who must apply and be vetted by the Ministry of Defense . Eligible parties include:
The platform operates 24/7 for approved users, who log in through a secure portal at trophylab.mod.gov.ua . First Deputy Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko described the goal as creating "a global research ecosystem around captured Russian equipment"
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Beyond digital data, TrophyLab allows partners to submit requests for physical access to actual captured hardware . Users can request specific items for:
Ukraine's Ministry of Defense coordinates the logistics of making physical trophies available to approved partner laboratories and research facilities . This means allied engineers can both study digital breakdowns and, when needed, put a real captured Russian missile or drone on a lab bench — a capability one analyst described as replacing "a process that once required a Mossad operation with a login"
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Ukrainian officials have outlined three core strategic goals for the platform:
As Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov stated: "Every missile, drone, and vehicle seized on the battlefield is now a source of knowledge for the free world" .
The launch of TrophyLab represents a significant shift in how Ukraine leverages its wartime technical intelligence, turning battlefield trophies into a structured, shareable asset for global defense collaboration.
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