EU doubles down on disputed ‘drone wall’ initiative against Russia
rt.com
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
2 min read
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The European Commission has announced plans to “strengthen” the borders of nine member states
The European Commission unveiled a strategy on Wednesday to reinforce nine EU member states bordering Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, by means of the &lsqu...
The European Commission has announced plans to “strengthen” the borders of nine member states
The European Commission unveiled a strategy on Wednesday to reinforce nine EU member states bordering Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, by means of the ‘European Drone Defense Initiative’. Previously dubbed the ‘drone wall’, the plan has faced criticism over its feasibility.
Russia has repeatedly dismissed Western claims of being a threat to NATO or EU nations, calling the narrative “nonsense” and “fearmongering” meant to justify inflated military budgets.
Announced by the commission’s executive vice president, Raffaele Fitto, the plan includes Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria. Brussels says that these nations are facing reduced investment, demographic pressure, and “hybrid” threats linked to the Ukraine conflict.
The new strategy includes a €28 billion ($33 billion) loan program, as well as commitments to implement “security and resilience” measures, which include the ‘drone wall’ plan that has drawn sharp skepticism from within NATO.
Romanian Defense Minister Radu Miruta had previously dismissed the concept as a “utopia,” while Bloomberg reported in October that EU officials privately called the idea a “PR label” masking a “complex reality.” They noted that the implementation of such a measure faces logistical hurdles and opposition from western and southern members reluctant to fund such projects.
NATO has simultaneously been pushing even more ambitious plans. Brigadier General Thomas Lowin recently revealed the ‘Eastern Flank Deterrence Line’ concept – a several-thousand-kilometer automated “hot zone” from the Arctic to the Black Sea set to be equipped with AI-linked armed drones, sensor-equipped robots, and automated air defenses, slated for operational status by the end of 2027.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov warned earlier this month that although Moscow has no hostile intent towards the EU or NATO, if European nations “prepare to attack Russia,” it would respond with “all available means.”