NATO and EU allies continue providing Ukraine with non-lethal aid, weapons, training, and intelligence, while firmly ruling out direct troop deployments for combat to prevent escalation and NATO Article 5 activation. A high-level NATO delegation visited Ukraine on March 22, 2026—the first since Russia's full-scale invasion—focusing on joint exercises, expanding the NATO-Ukraine Training Centre, and battlefield analytics integration, with Ukrainian drone teams recently routing 6,000 NATO troops in drills near the front lines. No verified fighting deployments have occurred amid stalled ceasefire talks and Russian warnings; upcoming NATO meetings and potential peacekeeping proposals post-armistice remain speculative drivers of trader caution.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$273,775 Vol.

June 30, 2026
4%
$273,775 Vol.

June 30, 2026
4%
For military personnel to qualify toward a "Yes" resolution, they must be 1) officially acknowledged as active military by the NATO or EU entity or member state they are affiliated with; 2) be publicly acknowledged by NATO or an EU-affiliated entity to have entered Ukraine for a combat-related military purpose directly pertaining to the ongoing conflict with Russia.
For military personnel to qualify toward a "Yes" resolution they need be active duty and acknowledged as described above. Participation in a combat role is necessary for this market to resolve to "Yes" (e.g. military personnel providing training or intelligence support would not qualify toward a "Yes" resolution, however drone pilots or infantry directly attacking Russian troops, or soldiers targeting and downing missiles from Ukrainian soil would qualify toward a "Yes" resolution).
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from NATO, the EU, or member states of either entity, however a consensus of credible reporting will also be used.
Market Opened: Sep 23, 2025, 5:15 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...For military personnel to qualify toward a "Yes" resolution, they must be 1) officially acknowledged as active military by the NATO or EU entity or member state they are affiliated with; 2) be publicly acknowledged by NATO or an EU-affiliated entity to have entered Ukraine for a combat-related military purpose directly pertaining to the ongoing conflict with Russia.
For military personnel to qualify toward a "Yes" resolution they need be active duty and acknowledged as described above. Participation in a combat role is necessary for this market to resolve to "Yes" (e.g. military personnel providing training or intelligence support would not qualify toward a "Yes" resolution, however drone pilots or infantry directly attacking Russian troops, or soldiers targeting and downing missiles from Ukrainian soil would qualify toward a "Yes" resolution).
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from NATO, the EU, or member states of either entity, however a consensus of credible reporting will also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...NATO and EU allies continue providing Ukraine with non-lethal aid, weapons, training, and intelligence, while firmly ruling out direct troop deployments for combat to prevent escalation and NATO Article 5 activation. A high-level NATO delegation visited Ukraine on March 22, 2026—the first since Russia's full-scale invasion—focusing on joint exercises, expanding the NATO-Ukraine Training Centre, and battlefield analytics integration, with Ukrainian drone teams recently routing 6,000 NATO troops in drills near the front lines. No verified fighting deployments have occurred amid stalled ceasefire talks and Russian warnings; upcoming NATO meetings and potential peacekeeping proposals post-armistice remain speculative drivers of trader caution.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated


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