World

EU: Drone defenses not 'optional' in push to face Russia

QUOTE WITH PHOTO: "Russia has no capacity to launch an attack on the European Union today, but it could prepare itself in the years to come...Danger will not disappear, even if the war in Ukraine will end" Kaja Kallas, EU foreign policy chief

Ukraine artillerymen fire an M114 self-propelled howitzer towards Russian troops near the Pokrovsk in Donetsk region on Wednesday. — Reuters
 
Ukraine artillerymen fire an M114 self-propelled howitzer towards Russian troops near the Pokrovsk in Donetsk region on Wednesday. — Reuters

Brussels: The EU had no choice but to build up anti-drone defences against Russia, the bloc's vKaja Kallas said on Thursday, as Brussels unveiled a 'roadmap' to prepare for potential conflict by 2030.
The initiative is one of several flagship projects in the EU's 'readiness roadmap' aimed at preparing the bloc for a possible attack from Moscow in the coming years.
'Drones are already redefining warfare. Having drone defences is no longer optional for anyone,' Kallas told journalists.
'Today we propose a new anti-drone system to be fully operational by the end of 2027,' she said.
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen first called to create a 'drone wall' to counter Moscow last month, hours after Nato jets shot down Russian unmanned aircraft in Poland.
The initial focus of the proposal was on bolstering the EU's eastern border states, but it has since been broadened after mysterious drones rattled a string of countries further west.
Under the new plan Brussels wants the project — now called the 'European Drone Defence Initiative' — to begin working initially by the end of 2026, and to be fully functioning by the end of 2027.


Brussels hopes to get the backing of EU leaders for the plan — the latest volley in its push to ramp up its defences — at a summit next week.
'Russia has no capacity to launch an attack on the European Union today, but it could prepare itself in the years to come,' Kallas said.
'Danger will not disappear, even if the war in Ukraine will end.'
Alongside the drone initiative is a broader 'Eastern Flank Watch' programme designed to bolster air and ground defences along the EU's border closest to Russia by end 2028.
The EU is seeking to tap Ukraine's war-tested expertise to incorporate low-cost capabilities to tackle drones.
There has been some scepticism from countries such as Germany over the project — and fears that the EU could end up treading on the toes of the Nato military alliance.
So far the EU has not given a concrete estimate for how much it thinks the flagship projects will cost.
There is also so far no announcement on potential new financing — despite calls from EU countries close to Russia for the bloc to help spread the burden of new investments.
'We need fast, additional financial instruments, grant-based and without punishing the states that are on the border,' Lithuania's defence minister Dovile Sakaliene said.
'It's our joint responsibility to protect the Eastern flank border — all of us.'
Sakaliene said that given Moscow was 'clearly intensifying its hybrid war' against Europe, the 2027 goal for the anti-drone system was not soon enough.
'I'd like to have it sooner, because what we see is a rapidly rising concentration of incidents,' she said.
Meanwhile, some 84,000 people are still without power in the Russian-held part of Ukraine's Kherson region after Ukrainian strikes this week on energy infrastructure, a senior Russian official said on Thursday.
Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-appointed governor of the region, said Ukrainian attacks on Tuesday and Wednesday damaged a power substation, initially leaving almost 100,000 people in 96 settlements without electricity.
Both sides in the Russia-Ukraine war have intensified strikes on energy infrastructure since peace talks stalled in the summer.