Romania’s Defense Ministry said early on Wednesday (24 July) that it scrambled fighter jets overnight as the Russian military carried out a series of drone attacks near its shared border with southern Ukraine.
The defense ministry said in a statement that two F-16 aircraft took off at 2:19 a.m. local time from the 86th Borcea Air Base, located around 126 kilometers east of the capital Bucharest. According to the statement, the fighter jets were tasked with monitoring “the aerial situation.”
Around the same time, Romania’s Tulcea County — which borders southern Ukraine’s Odesa region — was put on alert as Russian forces were said to have been carrying out drone attacks “against certain targets” near the NATO member’s border with Ukraine. Authorities did not specify where those attacks had taken place.
Since the start of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Romania has on multiple occasions discovered drone debris near the border with its neighbor to the north. Authorities in the EU-member state have introduced measures to protect people living in and around the border area, including constructing air-raid shelters.
Every Time Russia Violated NATO Borders and Got Away With It
Since the beginning of the Russian full-scale war against Ukraine, there has been a concerning pattern of Russia violating NATO countries’ borders. From airspace incursions to suspected electronic warfare, these actions are seen as signs of a deliberate escalation by Moscow.
It’s deliberate and, importantly, logical within their strategy for dealing with NATO. They know that a bold stroke would likely trigger article 5, but if they can normalize a certain amount of activities that technically should but don’t trigger it, they hope they can undermine faith in the defense pact as a whole. Violating airspace is part of that.
For better or worse, NATO is fully aware of Russia’s long game, and has a goal of ramping up readiness to meet a Russia that has fully committed to a wartime economy.
At this point all that remains to be seen is whether the default outcome of a general conflict can be somehow avoided. It is hard to imagine how nuclear dictators in the modern era can be kept in check peacefully.
@0x815 It will keep getting away with it, as the military is not able to shoot down drones unless we are in a state of war. And if we do that, we might as well activate article 5 - which is something we do not want. So what is the solution? Air raid shelters and messages through RO-ALERT on people’s smartphones about “objects falling from the sky”.
That sounds like complete bollocks.
Romania can’t shoot down a foreign drone over it’s own airspace?
Turkey shot down an actual fighter jet.
Russian response?
K. Thanks… bye!
Turkey shot down an actual fighter jet.
Russian response?
K. Thanks… bye!
Which goes to show that when dealing with a certain kind, you should not be afraid to make a very clear point.
Yup. Ukraine should just offer temporary blanket immunity for firing at any aircraft heading towards their countries and either travelling faster than Mach 1 or within 10 km of the border. This would allow bordering nations to help under the guise of self defence.
@Minarble ikr, at least that’s what the generals in the military are complaining about.
Idk, Romania is just incompetent politicians that are voted by stupid people unable to look for an alternative to fix their problem for 3 decades already and regulations that are half stuck in the previous century, half poorly adapted to modern standards, so I wouldn’t be surprised if this would be true.
A post by @raduhossu (still not on fedi fwiw) on Xitter:
3 Shaheds have hit Romanian (NATO)!
I tweeted last night after receiving the near real-time images (first imagine) from a friend in Tulcea (Romania) that Izmail (Ukraine) is being hit by russians.
The Ukrainian press picked up the images, asked the Ukrainian authorities if a drone had crashed on Romanian territory and they, at least on sources, confirmed it.
During the day yesterday, several Romanian journalists went to the scene to investigate whether or not what the Ukrainians say is true. Well, guess what?
It is true. I’ll be using the images from daylight from Romanian journalists: Don Dorel Alex Alex Costache Dragos Stoian. It’s Shahed-136 most likely. There are 3 that fell on Romanian territory.
The government has not given any information about the fact that Romania’s territory was AGAIN hit (involuntarily?) by russian drones.
The Romanian government is in an election election mode. Sile t on the subject. The Romanian President is absent, but would have wanted to be NATO Secretary General. The Deputy Secretary General of NATO, Mircea Geoană, who is on the election campaign, is also silent.