Lithuania Urges NATO Air Defense Boost After Drone Incidents

Lithuania requests NATO air defense reinforcement after finding two Russian military drones on its territory, one containing explosives, raising concerns about conflict spillover and collective defense obligations.

Lithuania Calls for Enhanced NATO Air Defense

Lithuania has formally requested NATO to strengthen its air defense capabilities following the discovery of two military drones on its territory. Foreign Minister Gabrielius Budrys attributed the incidents to Russia, stating they represent spillover from the Ukraine conflict into NATO territory.

Drone Incidents Timeline

On July 10, a drone entered Lithuanian airspace from Belarus, triggering air raid alarms before crashing near the border. A second drone containing 2kg of explosives was found on August 4 at a military training ground. Both drones were identified as Russian Gerbera models.

The Gerbera Drone Threat

The Gerbera is a Russian kamikaze drone designed as a low-cost alternative to Iranian Shahed models. Constructed from plywood and polystyrene foam, these drones are difficult to detect by radar. They typically carry 5kg explosive payloads and cost approximately $10,000 per unit.

NATO Article 5 Implications

These incidents raise concerns about NATO's collective defense commitment under Article 5, which considers an attack on one member as an attack on all. Lithuania emphasized that border defense shouldn't fall solely on frontline states.

Regional Security Context

Similar incidents occurred in Poland and Romania since Russia's invasion of Ukraine. European NATO members recently doubled defense spending targets, with air defense systems being a key priority.

Isabella Kowalska

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