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Reçu aujourd’hui — 23 septembre 2025

Copenhagen’s main airport halts flights due to drones, but Kremlin dismisses it as “unworthy of attention”

23 septembre 2025 à 12:51

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Russia denies involvement in the latest drone attacks on Europe. Kremlin Spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has stated that accusations against Russia regarding unknown drones appearing over Copenhagen and Oslo are “groundless” and not worthy of attention, Interfax writes. 

On the evening of 22 September, Copenhagen’s main airport was temporarily closed for takeoffs and landings due to the appearance of unidentified drones, and flights were redirected to other airports. authorities reported 2–3 large drones in the airport area.

“Constantly making groundless accusations, frankly, leads to such statements no longer being taken seriously,” Peskov said, denying any Kremlin involvement.

Drones in Norway and the European threat

Unidentified drones were also spotted in Oslo, triggering an air alert over the Akershus Fortress. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen called the incident “the most serious attack to date on critical infrastructure.”

The Kremlin’s denials during the war in Ukraine

During the war in Ukraine, Russia has repeatedly denied involvement in attacks on civilian targets. For example, after large-scale shelling of Ukrainian cities, the Kremlin claimed the strikes were a response to Ukrainian provocations, without acknowledging its role in escalating the conflict.

The same rhetoric after the attack on Poland

Following the 10 September attack, when Poland shot down four out of 19 Russian drones with F-16 and F-35 aircraft that violated its airspace, Dmitry Peskov even refused to comment.

Meanwhile, the Russian Ministry of Defense denied any responsibility for the airspace violation, stating that during the nighttime attack, all intended targets in Ukraine were hit, and no objectives in Poland were planned.

Analysts challenge this claim, noting that drones were using 4G modems with Polish and Lithuanian SIM cards to test connectivity as early as June.

Moscow denies responsibility for Russian strike on Poland, Belarus insists drones “just lost their way”
Reçu avant avant-hier

Zelenskyy warns no one is safe in Europe, as Poland invokes NATO’s Article 4 after Russian UAVs breach airspace

10 septembre 2025 à 09:22

russian gerbera drones

In the night of 10 September, Russia’s massive attack on Ukraine spilled beyond Ukrainian skies. According to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, nearly Russian enemy drones may have entered Polish airspace. This unprecedented incident forced Warsaw to call on NATO allies and activate Article 4 of the North Atlantic Treaty.

Russia launched 415 drones of various types and over 40 cruise and ballistic missiles against Ukraine. One person was killed and several injured. Ukrainian air defenses destroyed more than 380 drones using mobile fire groups across the country. At the same time, part of the drone swarm crossed into Poland.

Polish confirmation

Prime Minister Donald Tusk has confirmed that Russia used 19 drones in an attack lasting six hours, calling it a serious test of Poland’s defense, Suspilne reports. F-16 and F-35 fighter jets were scrambled, but only 3–4 drones were intercepted, while the rest fell on Polish territory.

Possible reconnaissance of Polish air defenses

Defense Express experts, analyzing debris, have suggested the drones could have been Russian “Gerbera” models, primitive foam UAVs that can carry reconnaissance equipment or small explosive payloads of up to 5 kg. While often used as decoys, this time they may have served another purpose.

The drones were spotted over multiple regions: north of Lublin, near Stalowa Wola with its defense industries, west of Białystok, and even close to Łódź.

Analysts note that their flight paths coincided with key Polish air defense sites, including long-range radar posts in Roskosz (NUR-12M), Labunie (RAT-31DL), and Szypłiszki near the strategic Suwałki Gap, NATO’s link between the Baltic states, the rest of the Alliance, and Russia’s Kaliningrad Oblast. 

Experts warn the strike may have been a reconnaissance mission, probing Poland’s air defense ahead of possible future scenarios.

Ukraine’s response

Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy stresses that such incidents prove no European country is safe without joint action. 

“Ukraine is ready to expand cooperation with partners for reliable air defense. Not only information-sharing, but real joint actions in the sky must guarantee the security of neighbors. Russia must feel that Europeans know how to defend themselves,” he claims. 

NATO moves

Polish government spokesman Adam Szłapka told Polsat News that Warsaw officially invoked Article 4, and allies agreed to activate it.

Article 4 provides for urgent consultations when the territorial integrity, political independence, or security of a member state is threatened. Unlike Article 5, it does not trigger automatic military action, but it opens the way for reinforced defense measures, troop deployments, and new security guarantees.

A symbolic signal

For Moscow, this attack could be a test of the West’s reaction. For NATO, it is another reminder that Russia’s war against Ukraine directly threatens European allies.

Threat to the Alliance 

The attack on Poland is an unmistakable threat to NATO. At the same time, US President Donald Trump has so far made no public comments or official statements regarding Russia’s drone incursion into Polish airspace. Moreover, he has not yet implemented new sanctions on Moscow in response to its attacks on the top governmental building in Kyiv, as he previousely claimed. 

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