
A squadron of €10,000 discounted drones has been continuously colliding with EU major airports, breaching NATO airspace, and landing on Polish, Czech, and Belgian military bases. The intrusions, commonly attributed to Russia’s hybrid war campaign, are not only intimidations, but also technological demonstrations of demonstrating Europe’s air defense worth and wasting costly interceptors.

These intruder UAVs are usually made of lightweight materials like plywood and Styrofoam, which are difficult to detect by radar and anti-ship missiles with infrared seekers. They fly low, and their tiny radar cross-sections are hard to follow for conventional surveillance systems. Others, like the Russian Gera, carry small payloads for reconnaissance and sabotage. NATO’s downing of the drones uncovered an expensive asymmetry: it is not worth it in the long term to employ a €10,000 drone and an over €1 million missile.

Analysts have referred to the incursions as brazen probes. Moscow’s hybrid incursions, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies, are aimed at rendering such events commonplace, undermining people’s trust in NATO, and misleading the Alliance into counterproductive deployments of resources. By attacking weak infrastructure—airports, military bases, submarine cables—Russia can destabilize European societies without directly using overt military power.

European politicians have responded with a drone wall—a fleet of deploying tactical radar, electro-optical sensors, and high-rate-of-fire cannon systems supported by fixed batteries covering higher-altitude threats. It is technologically possible, but its experts warn of sky-high expenses and logistical impossibilities of taking responsibility for thousands of kilometers of European borders. It would require the integration of counter-UAV weapons like GPS jamming, directed-energy weapons, and cyber intrusion to blow up enemy UAVs before they can detonate on critical targets.

NATO members have already made investments. The €84 million deal has been won by an Australian company for a high-powered laser weapon so that it can blast a UAV fuselage in the air. The suggestion to deploy the laser-guided Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System rockets on Eurofighter Typhoons as a lower-cost, standby option to air-to-air missiles was proposed by BAE Systems. Such systems have been referred to as suppressing the cost asymmetry by providing rapid, accurate, and recoverable interceptors. Following the threat posed by drones is the threat of giving Ukraine Tomahawk cruise missiles. With a roughly estimated 1,500-mile kill radius and sophisticated terrain-following command systems, Tomahawks would have been able to penetrate deep into Russia with precision accuracy.

President Vladimir Putin threatened to use them would “mark an absolutely new, qualitatively new phase of escalation,” and cannot be launched except in the case of direct U.S. aggression. Russia, with its air defenses still fully operational, can respond and move very rapidly. The strategic stakes involved in deploying such extended-range weaponry in the Ukrainian equation are enormous and are able to rerun deterrence calculations in all of Europe.

Those intrusions since 2023 have included incendiary bomb attacks on warehouses storing gear to be exported to Ukraine, cutting undersea communications cables to sever links, and conspiracies to kill in a targeted way defense industry business leaders. Most of the attacks utilize legal loopholes and proxy actors in trying not to be directly attributed, a model labeled by experts as a “gig economy” model of secret war.

Recent deployments to Poland and Estonia triggered Article 4 talks, an unprecedented measure reflecting serious concern. Italian AWACS planes, German Patriot missile defense systems, Dutch F-35 fighter jets, and Polish F-16 fighter planes have been pledged through NATO air policing missions under the Eastern Sentry position. But over-reliance on expensive interceptors versus inexpensive drones has necessitated a 400% boost in air and missile defense systems, NATO commanders claim. Also, tensions are escalated by the threat of misestimation—one event like the Turkish 2015 shoot-down of a Russian Su-24 could spin out of control rapidly. Russia’s hybrid warfare campaign encompasses GPS jamming throughout the entire Baltic region, air traffic control system jamming, and disruption of naval navigation. These electronic attacks have the potential to blind radar or spoof intercept attempts by drones with anomaly detection to detect spoofing attempts in real-time.

President Trump’s latest move toward downing Russian planes and drones has provided NATO with political cover to pursue more assertive rules of engagement. Former NATO commanders warn against downing manned aircraft, but suggest that Moscow might be hoping for just that to increase tension. The dilemma is being handled in muscle memory without overreaction—basically a dance between restraint and deterrence.

In addition to military response, making Russian oil sales hurt can starve it of its capacity to finance a hybrid war. Russia is in terrible fiscal health, with fivefold the inflation rate of any Western economy’s baseline and foreign capital at zero. Double targeting of its oil and gas infrastructure—possible with help from extended-range precision technology—can tighten the squeeze.

The intersection of cheap drone warfare, precision-guided missile row, and silent sabotage has placed Europe in a game of strategy and technology. How flexible NATO can remain—through layered defense, cost-concern interceptors, and cyber-resilient integration—is the question of whether such penetration can continue as a thorn in the flesh or is the precursor of a larger war.
