Nato strengthens defences after Russian drones shot down over Poland

Laura GozziBBC News

AFP via Getty Images A police officer stands out of focus in the foreground. In the background, people wearing dark clothes and blue latex gloves walk in a hole in a damaged white house, the wooden roof beams exposed.AFP via Getty Images

Several Nato members are sending troops, artillery, and air defence systems to secure its eastern flank after what Poland called an unprecedented Russian drone incursion into its airspace.

In the early hours of Wednesday, three Russian drones were shot down after crossing into Polish airspace.

Other drones crashed to the ground and were later found across eastern Poland.

Poland has requested a UN Security Council session about the incident, which will take place on Friday at 19:00 GMT.

In response to the drone incursion, the Netherlands and the Czech Republic said they would send defences to Poland, while Lithuania would receive a German brigade and greater warning of Russian attacks on Ukraine that could cross over.

Germany also said it would “intensify its engagement along Nato’s eastern border” and extend and expand air policing over Poland.

Addressing parliament on Thursday, Polish Defence Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz listed the offers of support from Poland’s partners, saying the Dutch were going to deploy air defence systems, artillery and 300 troops, while the Czech would send helicopters and 100 soldiers.

He also said the French and the British could deploy aircraft to secure Nato’s eastern flank.

“Poland has repeatedly heard words of solidarity and empty gestures throughout its history,” Kosiniak-Kamysz said. “Today, we have concrete declarations.”

Although Russian drones and missiles have trespassed into some Nato member countries before, this was the most serious incident of its kind since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

The Kremlin said it had no further comment to make on claims that Russia had deliberately sought to stoke tensions in Poland.

Yet many Polish and European leaders believe the incursion was deliberate.

“This Russian provocation…is nothing more than an attempt to test our capabilities,” Poland’s President Karol Nawrocki said, echoing comments by his German and French counterparts.

Reuters A man in a navy jacket stands in front of a microphoneReuters

However, experts’ opinions are split on whether Moscow intended to launch the drones into Poland.

On Thursday, Nato’s top military commander Alexus Grynkewich acknowledged it was not yet known whether the act had been intentional and said even the precise number of drones which had crossed into Polish airspace was still to be determined.

But in the face of growing nervousness from the countries bordering Russia, neither Nato nor Poland are taking any chances.

Gen Grynkewich said Lithuania would be provided with greater warning of Russian aerial launches against Ukraine that risk crossing into Lithuania, as well as a German brigade that would act as deterrence and defence.

Map shows area in which a drone attack happened overnight. With Poland, Russia, Belarus and Ukraine labelled. The label for where the drone was found, Czosnówka, is a village in eastern Poland, about 40km (25 miles) from the border with Belarus. There are also labels to show where four airports were temporarily shut in Poland, including two in Warsaw, due to the drone strike.

Warsaw will set restrictions for drones and small air traffic along its eastern borders with Belarus and Ukraine, and Latvia has announced its eastern airspace would be closed for a week.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky offered to provide guidance and training to Western military representatives on how to fend off Russian aerial attacks as Ukrainian defence forces do on a near-nightly basis.

Zelensky also called for a joint air defence system to act as an air shield over Europe as a response for Russia’s “insolent” behaviour.

Adding to the anxiety felt in some quarters of eastern Europe are major joint military exercises between Belarus and Russia, dubbed Zapad 2025, due to start on Friday.

Poland said it would close its border with Belarus on Thursday “for national security reasons… in connection with the Zapad manoeuvres,” which it called “very aggressive”.

The previous Zapad drills were staged several months before the start of the war in Ukraine and involved about 200,000 troops in total.

This year’s exercise will be smaller in scale, according to Lithuanian military intelligence chief Mindaugas Mazonas, and involve up to 30,000 troops in total.

The response by US President Donald Trump to the drone incursion has so far been muted. “What’s with Russia violating Poland’s airspace with drones? Here we go!”, he wrote on social media on Wednesday without elaborating further.

Polish President Nawrocki said he and his US counterpart had spoken as “part of a series of consultations” with allies and said the talks “reaffirmed our unity”.