Europe Moves To Build Drone Wall After Airspace Breaches
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) European leaders face a new security challenge after Poland reported that nineteen Russian drones crossed its airspace on 10 September 2025.
Poland's Ministry of Defence called the incident unprecedented and activated emergency procedures. Days later, Romania confirmed that its F-16s tracked a drone that entered its territory.
Both events highlighted how cheap drones can test NATO's borders at low cost to Moscow but at high cost to defenders. NATO reacted by launching Operation Eastern Sentry on 12 September to strengthen its eastern flank.
The alliance deployed additional surveillance flights and promised to send more assets if needed. NATO said the goal is to close reaction gaps and prevent further violations.
In Brussels, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told the European Parliament that Europe must“build a drone wall.” She announced the frontloading of €6 billion from the ERA loan and confirmed the launch of a Drone Alliance with Ukraine.
The Commission described the wall as a network of drones, sensors, satellite links, and anti-drone systems designed to detect and neutralize threats before they reach cities or critical infrastructure.
The figures matter for more than defence. Parliament debates show that Europe wants to tie sovereignty protection to industrial growth. A new SAFE instrument will provide multi-year loans for joint procurement, mainly from European producers.
The idea is to expand production, stabilize costs, and ensure that tools like counter-drone kits and command systems arrive quickly and in large numbers.
Behind the story of border breaches is a commercial reality. Russia uses swarms of cheap drones to stretch opponents. NATO countries cannot afford to intercept each one with costly jets or missiles.
Europe's answer is to create a permanent, layered defence that relies on predictable contracts and scaled production rather than ad-hoc, expensive responses.
The combination of official reports makes the picture clear. Poland and Romania confirm violations. NATO strengthens its posture. The Commission commits funds.
Europe now frames drones not only as a military threat but as a supply problem. The solution links security with industry, ensuring that the continent can afford to defend itself at scale.
Poland's Ministry of Defence called the incident unprecedented and activated emergency procedures. Days later, Romania confirmed that its F-16s tracked a drone that entered its territory.
Both events highlighted how cheap drones can test NATO's borders at low cost to Moscow but at high cost to defenders. NATO reacted by launching Operation Eastern Sentry on 12 September to strengthen its eastern flank.
The alliance deployed additional surveillance flights and promised to send more assets if needed. NATO said the goal is to close reaction gaps and prevent further violations.
In Brussels, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told the European Parliament that Europe must“build a drone wall.” She announced the frontloading of €6 billion from the ERA loan and confirmed the launch of a Drone Alliance with Ukraine.
The Commission described the wall as a network of drones, sensors, satellite links, and anti-drone systems designed to detect and neutralize threats before they reach cities or critical infrastructure.
The figures matter for more than defence. Parliament debates show that Europe wants to tie sovereignty protection to industrial growth. A new SAFE instrument will provide multi-year loans for joint procurement, mainly from European producers.
The idea is to expand production, stabilize costs, and ensure that tools like counter-drone kits and command systems arrive quickly and in large numbers.
Behind the story of border breaches is a commercial reality. Russia uses swarms of cheap drones to stretch opponents. NATO countries cannot afford to intercept each one with costly jets or missiles.
Europe's answer is to create a permanent, layered defence that relies on predictable contracts and scaled production rather than ad-hoc, expensive responses.
The combination of official reports makes the picture clear. Poland and Romania confirm violations. NATO strengthens its posture. The Commission commits funds.
Europe now frames drones not only as a military threat but as a supply problem. The solution links security with industry, ensuring that the continent can afford to defend itself at scale.

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