Latest News

NATO scrambles jets following the deepest drone penetration yet into Romania

On Tuesday, Romanian and German NATO jet fighters scrambled near Romania's Ukraine border to respond to an incursion by a drone that penetrated further than ever before into Romanian airspace in what Bucharest referred to as a Russian provocation.

Ionut Mosteanu, the Defence Minister, said that NATO pilots were close to shooting down the drone, which repeatedly violated the airspace of the member state, but held back out of concern for causing damage on ground.

Later, drone fragments with no explosive charges were found on Romanian soil.

Mosteanu stated that "we are dealing with a Russian provocation, a drone that the Romanian Army and German Eurofighters tried to shoot down."

"My assumption would be that the pilots... analyzed the collateral damage potential and chose to not engage."

Overnight, Russian drones struck Ukrainian ports near the border of Romania across the Danube River.

The breach that Romania reported on Tuesday was the 13th violation of its airspace since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. It was not only the largest breach, but also the first one to occur during daylight rather than night.

A DRONE TRACED more than 100 km INLAND

The Romanian Defence Ministry said that it scrambled initially two Eurofighters, from a German air-policing operation in Romania. These aircraft tracked a drone before it returned to Ukraine in the county of Tulcea in Romania's south-east.

Later, the army scrambled 2 Romanian F-16 fighters after radar revealed a second breach of airspace in the neighboring county Galati. Mosteanu reported that two more Eurofighters were sent after.

The ministry stated that the planes were able to track the drone as it moved towards the county Vrancea. This county is located more than 100 kilometers inland and does not share any border with Ukraine.

Residents in all three counties received a warning to seek cover. The warning was lifted later.

Romania and Ukraine share a border of 650 km (400 miles).

General Christopher Donahue of the U.S. Army Europe & Africa said that a new capability to shoot down drones would be deployed in Romania.

"We have tested it and are in the final stages before it's used." This capability has been taught to Romanian soldiers as well as other soldiers in the alliance. I'm sure you will see it very soon on the Danube Delta.

Romania has a law that allows it to shoot drones down in peacetime when lives or property is at risk. However, it hasn't fully used it.

In recent months, tensions along Europe's east flank have risen after Russian drones allegedly breached NATO airspace.

The latest breach occurs as U.S. officials and Ukrainian officials are holding intense talks to narrow their differences over a plan for ending the war. They have already agreed to modify an American proposal, which Kyiv and European allies viewed as a Kremlin list. (Reporting and editing by Andrew Heavens, Peter Graff and Luiza Hovet)

(source: Reuters)