European countries meet to discuss a 'drone wall' as airspace violations mount

BRUSSELS (AP) — Representatives from European countries with borders close to Russia and Ukraine are holding talks on Friday about building a “drone wall” to plug gaps in their defenses following several airspace violations.
Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland have been working on a drone wall project, but in March, the European Union’s executive branch rejected a joint Estonia-Lithuania request for funds to set one up.
Since then, Europe’s borders have been increasingly tested by rogue drones. Russia has been blamed for some of the incidents, but denies that anything was done on purpose or that it played a role.
NATO jets scrambled on Sept. 10 to shoot down a number of Russian drones that breached Polish airspace, in an expensive response to a relatively cheap threat. Airports in Denmark were temporarily closed this week after drones were flown nearby.
EU Defense Commissioner Andrius Kubilius is chairing Friday’s talks. The meeting, via video-link, will include those countries plus officials from Bulgaria, Denmark Romania and Slovakia, along with representatives from Ukraine and NATO.
The aim is to establish what equipment those countries have to counter drone intrusions, what more they might need to plug any gaps along NATO’s eastern flank, and for Kubilius work out where EU funds might be found to help the effort.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said earlier this month that Europe “must heed the call of our Baltic friends and build a drone wall.”
“This is not an abstract ambition. It is the bedrock of credible defense,” von der Leyen told EU lawmakers.
It should be, she said, “a European capability developed together, deployed together, and sustained together, that can respond in real time. One that leaves no ambiguity as to our intentions. Europe will defend every inch of its territory.”
Von der Leyen said that 6 billion euros ($7 billion) would be earmarked to set up a drone alliance with Ukraine, whose armed forces are using the unmanned aerial vehicles to inflict around two-thirds of all military equipment losses sustained by Russian forces.
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