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Denmark informs Latvia that drone activity is linked to state actor

Baiba Braze, Latvia's Minister of Foreign Affairs, said that Denmark had informed its allies about drone incursions in Denmark that briefly affected airports and military installations.

Braze told a reporter that the Danish government had said that it was a state-run activity.

"We will wait to hear more from our Danish counterparts, but we are all clear that we must invest in counter-drone capabilities, both on the side of our allies and our own."

The Danish Foreign Ministry did not respond immediately to a comment request.

Denmark said Thursday that the incidents are hybrid attacks intended to spread fear. However, authorities were unable to identify the perpetrators.

Latvia has developed counter-drone capability, including acoustic sensor, and worked closely with Ukraine which is subject to drone attacks almost every day from Russia.

"We have invested consciously in counter-drone activities. These scenarios are also asymmetric. "It's difficult to know when and where," said she.

Braze said that it was difficult to deal with countries such as Latvia and Denmark, given that they are not at war. Their airspace is not closed like in Ukraine.

There's a great deal of legitimate activity going on. "We have to work it out correctly," she said.

The EU is looking into how to build a "drone fence" along the EU’s eastern border. This project has been given a new urgency after a Russian drone intruded into Poland.

Analysts and officials claimed that the incursion revealed gaps in Europe and NATO's capability to protect against drones. However, Polish and NATO forces did shoot down a few of them using expensive air defense systems and warplanes.

"The time you need to accomplish this is very short, and you also don't want F-35 fighters," Braze said, whose nation leads a NATO coalition that aims to move the alliance on this issue. (Reporting from John Irish and Jacob GronholtPedersen in Copenhagen, editing by Michelle Nichols & Howard Goller).

(source: Reuters)