Russia-responsible NATO’s invasion into airspace reached an unprecedented scale this month, raising doubts about whether the Kremlin is trying to test the alliance’s willingness to Ability to respond to direct attacks Or, divert that attention and resource from War in Ukraine.
Russia is invading the airspace of NATO neighbors For decadeseither deny that it happened or dispels it as unintentional. However, since the Ukraine invasion in 2022, such invasions poses a greater threat than when drones flocked to Poland two weeks ago, allowing NATO to shoot them down.
Estonia said Russian fighters jumped into its territory last week. There was 12 minutes left – Invasion The Foreign Minister of Estonia described it as “unprecedented bravery,” but what Russia denies happened. and Romania and Latvia reported That single Russian drone violated the airspace this month.
As Moscow has a strong hand in hand if it decides to slowly and steadily on the Ukrainian battlefield and speaks of peace, it also raises doubts as to why its recent advance into NATO airspace risks causing a direct military conflict with the alliance.
Let’s take a look at what is going on and what the Russian motives are.
These intrusions are different
None of the NATO airspace invasions had the scope of what happened in Poland on September 10th. Shot down by the NATO Jets Or crash yourself. It marked the first direct military involvement between the Alliance and Russia since the beginning of a full-scale invasion in Ukraine.
Russia denied that it targeted Poland, and its ally, Belarus, claimed that the drone signal had been hampered by Ukraine, which borders Poland. But European leaders pointed out last week and cast it as a deliberate provocation Violation of Estonian airspace and Other recent incidents As further evidence of some broader schemes organized by Moscow.
Possible Motives of Russia
Before invading Ukraine in 2022, the Kremlin requested that NATO remove plans to provide Kiev membership in alliances near the Russian border, including the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. NATO has rejected the request.
Russian President Vladimir Putin also warned NATO not to allow Kiev to attack deep in Russia. Long range weapons supported by the Westthreatened that Moscow could respond by targeting military facilities in NATO countries that would allow such attacks. There is a great risk, including Moscow, as it could cause a direct conflict between Russia and NATO.
Some experts have seen the recent rise in NATO Airspace invasions as a Russian attempt to enable the alliance to respond to exploit cracks and indecisiveness. And some believe that Russia wants to distract NATO’s attention and resources in order to protect its own territory from Ukraine’s support.
“Maybe their calculations are that European countries have to send something more to Estonia regarding air defense assets, which means they cannot send it to Ukraine,” said Estonian Defence Minister Hanno Pebukul. “Russia is trying to tear us from Ukraine.”
Mark Galeotti, a Russian politics expert who leads Mayak Intelligence Consultants, believes the intrusion is part of “forced signaling,” which aims to prevent NATO members from providing robust security assurances to Kiev, including the possibility of military deployment into Ukraine as part of a peace deal. Moscow has warned that it will not accept Ukrainian NATO forces.
“This is what Moscow says: “Look at how dangerous they are already, and how dangerous they are. Remember that we are even bolder, intentional, reckless, and determined – use the adjectives you want.
Edward Lucas, a senior fellow at the European Centre for Policy Analysis, said Russia may be trying to highlight NATO’s weaknesses in the attempt to instill corrosive issues in the minds of its allies.
“Russia doesn’t need to defeat NATO militarily if it can defeat it politically,” Lucas wrote in his analysis. “If members of the Alliance don’t believe that other members will come to their aid when they are attacked, they feel isolated.”
Russia may have specifically wanted to measure the response of the US, the largest member of NATO, said Europe’s head of Russia and Max Bergman of the Eurasian Center for Strategic and International Studies.
“I think it was very overwhelming,” he said of the US reaction to the invasion. “What we’re looking at is that under President Trump, the US is not responsible for European security, and that’s very enlightening for Russians. They could escalate even more.”
NATO’s response and the role of the US
After the drone herd incident, Poland sparked a NATO mechanism that allowed members to request a full meeting if they believe territorial integrity, political independence or security is at stake. Soon after that, the alliance began operations to strengthen air defense along the east.
NATO retold the debate on Tuesday in response to Russian fighters jumping into Estonian airspace, warning Moscow that defending further violations was some measure.
Prime Minister Donald Tass said Poland would shoot down objects jumping into its territory “without discussion.”
However, it is unclear whether all NATO allies support such an offensive approach. NATO Executive Director Mark Latte said Tuesday that the decision to fire on intruding aircraft is based on “available intelligence regarding the threat posed by the aircraft.”
US President Donald Trump, who surprised his allies by saying that Russian drones had “may have been a mistake,” sent a more harsh message on Tuesday, responding in the affirmative when NATO was asked if they should shoot down an invading Russian aircraft. However, he made it intentional when he thrusts whether the United States would intervene in favor of the alliance in such cases.