Good morning. This is Angela Skujins, penning today's newsletter from Brussels. And yes, your eyes don’t deceive you. I was just on Europe Today speaking about unmanned aerial vehicles. I am proof you can have your cake and eat it too.
Before we dive in, news has just come in that the German Chancellor Friedrich Merz wants a “new dynamic” when it comes to the pace and style of negotiations surrounding Ukraine and Moldova's bid to join the European Union (EU).
“Enlargement of the European Union is a geopolitical necessity. However, the enlargement process takes much too long,” the letter, sent to EU heavyweights such as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President António Costa, reads. Our journalists will dissect this story later today in further detail, so keep an eye on the Euronews website.
But first: defence, as Thursday’s political agenda is rooted in security. As the Baltics scramble to respond to a spate of drone incursions – at least six since the beginning of May – foreign ministers are meeting in Sweden to discuss the biggest issues facing the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) alliance.
Lithuania’s Defence Minister Robertas Kaunas just said on Europe Today that there was "no panic" on Wednesday regarding the region's latest incursion, and the Lithuanian government aims to allay the anxieties of its citizens through better defence spending and investments. Watch.
So, what happened? The Lithuanian city of Vilnius was gripped by a security scare at 10am yesterday morning due to reports of a potential drone incursion, highlighting growing anxiety along NATO’s eastern flank amid Russia's war with Ukraine.
Since the start of the month, there have been six reported or suspected drone incursions recorded in Baltic and Finnish airspace, sending shivers up the spine of European countries near Russia’s border – as well as their allies.
Wednesday’s warning in the capital lasted for roughly one hour, but prompted the closure of the country’s airport, the evacuation of Lithuanian parliament and President Gitanas Nausėda and Prime Minister Inga Ruginienė, who were taken to shelters.
For months the European Union, working off intelligence from national security services, has been sounding the alarm that foreign actors could attack the continent by 2030. This is why the EU executive has allocated €800 billion to beefing up defences and funding projects aiming to fortify Europe’s 3,500-kilometre land border along the east.
But the real question isn’t whether Europe can build stronger defences – it’s whether it can stay one step ahead of a Kremlin that thrives on unpredictability. Europe can spend billions hardening its borders, but Moscow only needs to expose one weak seam to create panic and political pressure.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen responded to Wednesday’s incursion by writing on social media platform X that a threat against one is an attack on all, and “Europe will respond with unity and strength.” Whether this is enough to keep Moscow at bay is the bigger question.
Outside of Brussels, NATO foreign ministers are starting a two-day ministerial in Helsingborg, Sweden amid further cuts to US commitments to the alliance’s security. As Shona Murray writes-in to report, the Pentagon confirmed the US is to announce fundamental changes to its participation in NATO’s force posture, and overall wider European security.
The exact details will be disclosed on Friday, but the message is loud and clear. The US is no longer a guarantor of European security. Even in times of war, as confirmed by a NATO source to Euronews. The announcement comes while the war in Iran grinds on.
The US-Israel conflict is leading to rapidly depleting stockpiles of crucial military weapons which may have a knock-on effect for Ukraine as supplies struggle to keep up with the pace of attrition.
In addition, news the US is reducing its commitment to NATO will cause further challenge to NATO allies close to Russia considering several drone incursions into allied territory over recent days.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte played down the US announcement, reiterating the fact the Trump administration has long signalled it was retreating from European security architecture as part of the “America First” doctrine. “This has been expected," he told journalists in a pre-ministerial press conference Wednesday. |