Von der
Leyen’s ‘drone wall’ plan crashes into EU reality
Europe’s
latest defense debate is splitting countries demanding immediate protection
from Russia and those further from the threat.
October
3, 2025 4:00 am CET
By Chris
Lunday, Laura Kayali and Jacopo Barigazzi
https://www.politico.eu/article/ursula-von-der-leyen-drone-wall-plan-crash-eu-reality/
The
European Commission’s drone wall idea is showing cracks before intercepting its
first Russian intruder.
With
Russian drones crossing into Poland and Romania and unidentified (but suspected
Russian) ones being tracked over Denmark, Norway and Germany, Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen is pitching a shiny new shield of radars and
interceptors to help defend the bloc's eastern flank.
She
called it a "drone wall" in her State of the Union address last
month.
Both the
name and the concept are drawing flak.
For the
Baltics and Poland it sounds like a sensible response to a growing emergency.
But countries further from Russia are poking holes in the idea, worrying about
its feasibility and cost, how it fits into EU and NATO military plans, and
whether it's a power grab by Brussels over national defense policy.
“Drones
and anti-drones are the priority,” French President Emmanuel Macron told
reporters on Thursday. “But we have to be clear: There is no perfect wall for
Europe, we’re speaking about a 3,000-kilometer border, do you think it’s
totally feasible? The answer is 'no.'”
Defense
Commissioner Andrius Kubilius, a former Lithuanian prime minister, sprang to
its defense. He said the original plan for countering drones covering Poland
and the Baltics would cost about €1 billion, and getting detection capabilities
in place could be done in less than a year.
However,
he conceded that calling it a "wall" might give the wrong idea. It
“wouldn’t be a new Maginot Line," he said, referring to the French
defensive fortifications that Germany successfully bypassed in World War II.
There are
also worries that the Commission may be over-promising.
“I hope no one sees the drone wall as an easy
fix to our defense problems,” said Hannah Neumann, a German Greens MEP and a
member of the European Parliament's Security and Defense Committee. “A drone
wall won’t protect us from cyberattacks, nor will it help with air defense,
ammunition production, or the deeper issues around decision-making structures
and rules of engagement.”
EU money
to fight drones
The
divergences are especially problematic because Brussels together with frontline
states want to use EU money to help fund
the drone wall; for that to happen, all EU capitals have to agree.
The
reluctance of Southern countries — Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Greece’s Kyriakos
Mitsotakis both said during this week's Copenhagen meeting of EU leaders that
European defense projects should benefit the whole bloc, not only its Eastern
flank — prompted calls for “solidarity” from exposed nations.
“We have
shown solidarity for the last two decades, for example, in Covid, in economy,
in migration. Now is the time to show solidarity in security,” Finnish Prime
Minister Petteri Orpo told POLITICO.
That
disagreement was on full display in Copenhagen, both publicly and behind closed
doors. Inside the room, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz slammed the plan in
what one diplomat familiar with the discussion described as “very harsh” terms.
Defending
against Russia
Despite
quibbling over the size — as well as the name — of the drone wall, there is
little debate that Europe needs to improve its ability to fend off Russian
drones. The bloc lacks detection tech to easily pick up UAVs, and when NATO
jets downed three Russian drones over Poland last month, they used
multi-million-dollar missiles to knock down Russian Gerberas costing about
$10,000 each.
Although
there were objections in Copenhagen, in the end EU leaders accepted the
Commission's defense proposals, including the drone wall — which means it's
expected to go ahead in some form. However, details on timing, cost and
capabilities still need to be spelled out.
And the
branding is likely to change.
On
Wednesday, Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen talked about a “European
network of anti-drone measures.” When she was asked by a journalist why she
hadn’t used the term "drone wall," she replied: “I don’t really care
about the name as long as it works.”
Beefing
up anti-drone efforts makes sense at a time when Russia is probing NATO
defenses. However, the measures aren't a panacea — especially if the
confrontation with Moscow gets closer to full-out war.
“A drone
wall can work regionally — in the Baltics you can build a static defense,” said
Christian Mölling, defense analyst and program director at the Bertelsmann
Foundation. “But drones are only the fingers; if you want to win, you must
target the head: command, logistics and production capacity.”
Frontline
states have no illusions that a drone wall alone will suffice to prevent a
Russian attack. But they argue something has to be done to deter Moscow.
“Of
course, we are realists … we do not expect, for example, a drone wall on our
border that will eliminate any threats 100 percent,” said Polish Prime Minister
Donald Tusk. “If someone is looking for 100 percent guarantees of security,
they will find nothing. We, as NATO, as Europe, must look for methods that
maximize our security.”
Jan
Cienski and Giorgio Leali contributed to this report.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário