Denmark links drone sorties to state actor, Latvia says; Russia denies involvement

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Latvia's Foreign Minister Baiba Braze attends a press conference after a meeting of the Foreign ministers from the member countries of the Nordic-Baltic Eight, NB8, at the island of Bornholm, Denmark, Tuesday April 29, 2025. Ritzau Scanpix/Thomas Traasdahl via REUTERS/File Photo

Denmark told Nato allies that unspecified “state actors” were responsible for drone incursions that shut two airports, Latvian Foreign Minister Baiba Braze said on Sept 25.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:
  • Drone incursions closed two Danish airports, with a Latvian minister reporting Denmark suspected "state actors" involvement, though Danish officials remain unsure.
  • Denmark views the incidents as "hybrid attacks" to sow fear, increasing security at critical infrastructure and boosting its military budget.
  • Allies are urged to invest in counter-drone capabilities after airspace vulnerability was exposed; similar incidents occurred in Poland and Estonia.

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COPENHAGEN - Denmark reported to Nato allies that unspecified “state actors” were responsible for

drone incursions that shut two airports,

Latvia’s foreign minister told Reuters on Sept 25, but Danish officials said it was still unclear who was behind the incidents.

The incursions forced Aalborg airport, used for commercial and military flights, to shut for three hours, while Billund airport, Denmark’s second-largest, was closed for an hour, police said. Both reopened on Sept 25 morning.

“The Danish government said it’s a state activity that operates it,” Latvian Foreign Minister Baiba Braze said, in an interview on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.

But Danish Defence Intelligence Service chief Thomas Ahrenkiel said at a Sept 25 evening news conference it was still unclear who was behind the incidents and declined to say if a state actor was suspected.

However, Mr Finn Borch, head of Denmark’s national security and intelligence service, told reporters at the news conference that Russian covert activity poses a security threat.

“The risk of Russian espionage is high. The same goes for the risk of Russian sabotage. We have seen that elsewhere in Europe, and it applies here at home as well,” Mr Borch said.

Russia’s embassy in Copenhagen on Sept 25 rejected as “absurd” speculation that Moscow was involved in the Danish incursions.

Denmark’s defence minister earlier said the overnight drone sorties were hybrid attacks, combining military and covert tactics, and were aimed at spreading fear.

The incident on Sept 25, the second this week in Denmark alone, is part of what some European officials see as a pattern of Russian disruption that has exposed the vulnerability of European airspace at a time of high tensions between Moscow and Nato.

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen linked the drone incident that shut Copenhagen airport late on Sept 22 to suspected Russian drone activities across Europe, without providing evidence.

Drones over North Sea

The Latvian minister said Denmark’s allies were waiting for further analysis from Copenhagen.

But the incursions have demonstrated “we all have to invest in counter-drone capability,” she said.

Danish officials said on Sept 25 that it was still unclear who was behind the incidents.

PHOTO: EPA

In the Sept 25 incursions in Denmark, drones were also seen near Esbjerg and Sonderborg airports, as well as Skrydstrup airbase, home to Denmark’s F-16 and F-35 fighter jets, and over a military facility in Holstebro, police confirmed. They are all located in the western Jutland region.

Civil rescue company Esvagt told Reuters its vessels had observed late on Sept 24 what appeared to be drones flying over the North Sea. Local police received a report about drones near North Sea oil fields, state broadcaster DR reported.

“This shows at least that we do not have the capacity at present to prevent the intrusion of drones over our airports,” said Associate Professor Peter Viggo Jakobsen, of the Royal Danish Defence College. “This is a hole in our preparedness.”

Danish police said they had increased their presence at the affected airports and other critical infrastructure. The incursions come after Denmark this year boosted its military budget to address acute shortcomings.

Last week, it announced plans to acquire long-range precision weapons, while its decision to host Ukrainian missile fuel production near the Skrydstrup airbase has drawn criticism from Russia.

‘Systematic’ sorties

Poland

shot down suspected Russian drones in its airspace

on Sept 10. Danish authorities said on Sept 25 they decided not to take down any of the drones in their airspace for safety reasons, despite the disruption caused to air traffic.

“It certainly does not look like a coincidence. It looks systematic. This is what I would define as a hybrid attack,” Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen told a press conference.

Denmark has not yet decided whether to invoke Nato’s Article 4, which allows members to request consultations over any security concerns, Mr Poulsen added.

Poland invoked the article after downing the drones, as did Estonia after

Russian military jets violated its airspace

for 12 minutes on Sept 19.

Danish opposition lawmaker Pelle Dragsted of the Red-Green Alliance said on X that the government showed “no control over the most basic thing: Defence of our own vulnerable infrastructure.”

Danish analyst Prof Jakobsen agreed with suspicions that Moscow was behind the drone incursions. He said Russia excelled at “going right to the edge of what would trigger a military response from Nato, but not over it.” REUTERS

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