Use Ukraine’s counter drone expertise to protect Nato’s borders, Lithuania says

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FILE PHOTO: Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kestutis Budrys speaks during an exclusive interview in Vilnius, Lithuania, September 10, 2025. REUTERS/Janis Laizans/File Photo

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kestutis Budrys said Ukraine was fighting back drones every night and had the integrated systems to counter drones.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- Ukraine should be fully integrated into plans for a drone wall to protect Nato’s borders because it has the experience and know-how to be able to do it, Lithuania’s Foreign Minister said on Sept 22. 

The European Union is looking at how to create a drone wall along the EU’s eastern border – a project infused with urgency by a Russian drone incursion into Poland.

Analysts and officials said the incursion exposed gaps in Europe’s and Nato’s ability to protect against drones, although Polish and North Atlantic Treaty Organisation forces shot down several of them, albeit using expensive air defence systems and warplanes. 

“We have big holes in our EU defence. We lack the right equipment that would allow us to detect drones, to follow them, to track them, and then to destroy them. We lack it,” Mr Kestutis Budrys told Reuters on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly.

Mr Budrys said Ukraine was fighting back drones every night and had the integrated systems to counter drones.

“We have to bring this technology to the front line and to build it there, build it there so that it will be effective together with Ukrainians,” Mr Budrys said.

Speaking on Russian incursions into Nato airspace, Mr Budrys said Moscow was using the alliance’s hesitations and debate on how to respond to expand the grey zones.

“We have to also very clearly articulate and show to Russia that further escalation from their side will bring a harsher response,” he said. 

Those comments echoed Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski, who earlier at the UN warned Russia not to “come here to whine about it” if a plane or missile was shot down next time they entered Polish airspace.

Mr Michael Waltz, the new US envoy to the UN, told a Security Council meeting last week to discuss accusations of a Russian airspace violation that the US and its allies would defend every inch of the Nato military alliance’s territory.

Sanctions

When asked about the US pressuring Europe to be tougher on sanctions over Russia’s hydrocarbons sector, while holding off on imposing its own sanctions, Mr Budrys said Washington had a point.

“We have to look into the mirror,” he said. “The fact that some of the European nations increased imports last year from Russia of LNG (Liquefied natural gas), this is not only shameful, this is dangerous, because this is how we are supplying Russia’s war machine,” he said, adding that putting sanctions on Russian energy firms like Gazprom and Novatek would make the bloc more credible. 

Once it had put its own house in order, then it would be easier to have a proper coordinated strategy with the US, he said.     

“Without the United States and without coordination with the United States, European sanctions are weak. When we have the United States in the front and pulling all the train, it works,” he said. 

The bloc is currently studying a 19th package of Russian sanctions that would include a phasing out of European LNG purchases by 2027. REUTERS

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