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Russia waging 'gray zone campaign': EU Chief

“This is absolutely not sustainable. We need an anti-drone system that is affordable and fit for purpose. For swift detection, swift interception, and when needed, swift neutralisation,” she said, adding that Europe has much to learn in this from Ukraine.

News Arena Network - Brussels - UPDATED: October 8, 2025, 06:51 PM - 2 min read

EU Chief Ursula von der Leyen.


European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, in her recent statement, has said that Russia is waging a “targeted gray zone campaign” against Europe, including airspace violations, sabotage. The cyberattacks will only escalate if the Kremlin is not challenged, added the EU Chief.
 
In just two weeks, fighter jets breached Estonia's airspace, while drones overflew military bases and critical infrastructure sites in Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Poland, and Romania.
 
“Europe must respond. We must investigate every incident, and we must not shy away from attributing responsibility because every square centimeter of our territory must be protected and safe,” von der Leyen told EU lawmakers in Strasbourg, France, adding, “If we hesitate to act, the gray zone will only expand.”
 
The EU's executive branch, under von der Leyen's guidance, is preparing a plan for Europe to be ready to confront such challenges by 2030. EU officials believe that Russia could be capable of launching an attack on another European country within three to five years.
 
The plan includes the development of a “drone wall” of high-tech systems linked to equipment that can detect, track and destroy drones, as well as strike their operating systems or pilots on the ground.
 
In two weeks, von der Leyen will submit a “road map” for bolstering Europe's defences by the end of the decade to the 27-nation bloc's heads of state and governments for their approval.
 
Von der Leyen said that it's simply not affordable for European countries to continue to scramble the latest-generation fighter jets to counter relatively cheap drones, as happened when several of them entered Polish airspace a month ago.
 
“This is absolutely not sustainable. We need an anti-drone system that is affordable and fit for purpose. For swift detection, swift interception, and when needed, swift neutralisation,” she said, adding that Europe has much to learn in this from Ukraine.
 
The commission believes that the best way to encourage European countries to invest more in defence is to ensure that it creates jobs and is good for business in Europe. It insists that at least 65 per cent of any project funded with EU money should be based on the continent.
 
“Most investment goes outside Europe. In other words these are jobs outside Europe. This is absolutely not sustainable,” von der Leyen said. “This is European money and we want to see a return on this investment in jobs here in Europe.”
 
At a summit in Copenhagen last week, the position of some EU leaders toward the drone incidents, acts of sabotage, cyberattacks and sanction-busting appeared to have hardened. Denmark has not directly attributed a series of drone flights over the country in recent weeks to Russia.

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