EU can’t stop Russian drones yet, defense chief says — 2030 goal already outdated

At a security conference in Brussels, Andrius Kubilius revealed the bloc has met only 50% of NATO’s defense capacity targets.
eu defense chief says europe’s own €150 billion fund now help ukraine · post european commissioner space andrius kubilius sky news russian threat skynews-robbins-drones_6950494 ukrainian reports
European Commissioner for Defense and Space Andrius Kubilius. Photo Sky News
EU can’t stop Russian drones yet, defense chief says — 2030 goal already outdated

The EU still lacks defenses to counter Russian drones, and must prepare earlier than planned, warned the bloc's Defense Commissioner Andrius Kubilius in Brussels, La Repubblica reports on 14 October.

His comments come as European skies have faced a series of provocative incursions since September, from Russian military drones entering Polish and Romanian airspace and Russia's aircraft entering Estonia to multiple unidentified UAV sightings over airports and military facilities across the continent's north.

EU drone defenses lag far behind as Russia accelerates

Speaking at the fifth European Conference on Security and Defense, La Repubblica says, Kubilius acknowledged that the EU "is not ready" yet to defend itself against unmanned aerial vehicles — despite nearly four years of drone-centric warfare in Ukraine, where drones have played a key role.

Kubilius said Russia could launch drones from cargo ships toward any European coastline, and Europe still lacks the means to stop them.

Now it is time to deliver on what we promised,” he said.

According to Kubilius, the EU has spent the past 10 months preparing for a collective defense posture meant to reach readiness by 2030. But that timeline, he warned, no longer matches the urgency of the threat:

We must be ready before 2030, because [Russian President] Vladimir Putin will be ready.”

He stressed that Russia, in just three months, produces more ammunition than all NATO members — including the US and all Europeans — do in an entire year.

So, about four times as much,” Kubilius said.

Kubilius reminded participants that NATO had set new capability targets for all member states at its June summit in The Hague. However, “it seems that now we have only 50% of the capabilities we need by 2030,” he admitted.

 

To suggest a correction or clarification, write to us here

You can also highlight the text and press Ctrl + Enter

Please leave your suggestions or corrections here



    Euromaidan Press

    We are an independent media outlet that relies solely on advertising revenue to sustain itself. We do not endorse or promote any products or services for financial gain. Therefore, we kindly ask for your support by disabling your ad blocker. Your assistance helps us continue providing quality content. Thank you!

    Related Posts