Poland warns of escalation, holds NATO talks after Russian drone intrusion
AFP September 11, 2025 01:20 AM
Synopsis

Poland gathered its NATO allies for urgent talks Wednesday after Russian drones flew into Polish airspace during an attack on Ukraine, Prime Minister Donald Tusk said, warning that the situation was inching closer to "open conflict". "This situation... brings us closer than ever to open conflict since World War II," Tusk told parliament, though there is "no reason today to claim that we are in a state of war".

Poland

Wyryki: Poland gathered its NATO allies for urgent talks Wednesday after Russian drones flew into Polish airspace during an attack on Ukraine, Prime Minister Donald Tusk said, warning that the situation was inching closer to "open conflict".

Poland's airspace was violated 19 times, Tusk said, and at least three drones were shot down after Warsaw and its allies scrambled jets. Authorities said nobody was harmed.

Footage posted by local media showed firefighters and the army in Wyryki-Wola, a village in eastern Poland, inspecting a house with its roof ripped open and debris littered nearby.


Poland's Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said the intrusion was not accidental, calling it "an unprecedented case of an attack not only on Poland's territory but also on the territory of NATO and the European Union".

US President Donald Trump was "tracking the reports out of Poland" and was set to speak to his Polish counterpart Karol Nawrocki, a White House official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Russia's defence ministry denied targeting Poland and its foreign ministry accused Warsaw of spreading "myths" to escalate the war in Ukraine.

The Russian embassy in Warsaw separately told AFP that "Poland has failed to provide evidence of the Russian origin of the objects that entered Polish airspace".

Russian drones and missiles have entered the airspace of NATO members including Poland several times during Russia's three-and-a-half-year war, but a NATO country has never attempted to shoot them down.

Tusk said he had invoked NATO's Article 4, under which a member can call urgent talks when it feels its "territorial integrity, political independence or security" are at risk -- only the eighth time the measure has been used.

"This situation... brings us closer than ever to open conflict since World War II," Tusk told parliament, though there is "no reason today to claim that we are in a state of war".

The incident came as Russia unleashed a barrage of strikes across Ukraine, including in the western city of Lviv.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the airspace violation was a "dangerous precedent" for Europe and urged a strong response from Kyiv's Western allies.

Poland's interior ministry said a house and a car had been damaged overnight, adding that seven drones and debris from an unknown projectile had been located so far.

"We were just sitting there, and this plane flew over... I said to my husband: 'Why is this plane so loud today?' And suddenly, a bang, and that was it," Alicja Wesolowska, 64, whose house was destroyed, told AFP in Wyryki-Wola.

The North Atlantic Council, NATO's main political decision-making body, changed the format of its weekly meeting on Wednesday to hold it under Article 4 of the treaty.

A cornerstone of NATO is the principle that an attack on any member is deemed an attack on all.

NATO chief Mark Rutte hailed his organisation's "very successful reaction", telling journalists the alliance's air defences had done their job.

He denounced Moscow's "reckless behaviour" and called on Putin to halt a war that he said was now being waged on civilians.

'Act of aggression'
Russia's top diplomat in Poland, Andrei Ordash, told RIA Novosti earlier Wednesday that he had been summoned to the foreign ministry for a meeting.

The operational command of Poland's military said the airspace violations were "unprecedented" and "an act of aggression".

As European capitals rushed out condemnations, several portrayed the incident as Russia testing Ukraine's allies.

"What he wants to do is to test us," said the EU's top diplomat Kaja Kallas. "And every time he's bolder, because he's able to be bolder because our response hasn't been strong enough."

A senior NATO diplomat, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said the response from NATO would probably be "shifting a few extra assets" to Poland or elsewhere in the east, and pushing a "tough line" from the NATO secretary general.

The intrusion came just days before the Zapad-2025 military drills in Russia and Belarus on September 12-16.

Tusk, commenting on the drills, said "critical days" were ahead for Poland, after earlier announcing the closures of its few remaining border crossings with Belarus over the drills.

Poland, a major supporter of Ukraine, hosts over a million Ukrainian refugees and is a key transit point for Western humanitarian and military aid to the war-torn country.

Add ET Logo as a Reliable and Trusted News Source
Google Logo Add Now!
© Copyright @2025 LIDEA. All Rights Reserved.