EU Commission President Von der Leyen to Visit Lithuania Amid Drone Incursions
Quick Look
EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will visit Lithuania to meet with Baltic leaders and discuss coordinated responses to recent drone incursions, emphasizing solidarity and bolstering shared defense capabilities.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Recent drone incursions near the borders of Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, with some originating from or intended for Russia, have heightened security concerns in the Baltic states. These incidents have led to air alerts, NATO activation, and political fallout in Latvia.
BRUSSELS — European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will travel to Lithuania on Tuesday following a string of drone incursions that have seen citizens told to find safety in basements and bomb shelters.
Von der Leyen is expected to meet heads of state and government from the Baltic countries to support coordination of the response, three officials with knowledge of the visit — granted anonymity to share details — told POLITICO. Defense Commissioner Andrius Kubilius will also travel to Lithuania.
As well as showing “solidarity with the Baltic states,” the visit will focus on bolstering shared defense capabilities through the Commission’s flagship financing and planning schemes, said one of the officials.
Lithuania issued an air alert on Wednesday after a stray drone was detected close to the country's border with Belarus, with NATO’s Baltic air-policing mission activated as a result.
The incident came after two Ukrainian drones, intended for Russia, came down over an empty oil storage facility in Latvia earlier this month — sparking a crisis that has led to the collapse of the governing coalition. A NATO jet shot down a drone in Estonian airspace last week.
“Russia’s public threats against our Baltic States are completely unacceptable,” von der Leyen said in a message posted on social media last week. “Russia and Belarus bear direct responsibility for drones endangering the lives and security of people on our Eastern flank. Europe will respond with unity and strength.”
The three Baltic countries have warned that Moscow is seeking to capitalize on the incidents to drive a wedge between Ukraine and its EU allies — issuing a joint statement in which they rejected "Russia’s blatant disinformation campaign and its fabricated accusations following the airspace violations, which Russia shamelessly uses to mask its military failures."
The EU in February launched a plan to reinforce its frontline states amid concerns that Russia's war in Ukraine and hybrid tactics risk damaging local economies. The European Commission is also working on plans to help countries bolster their air defense capabilities with joint procurement and development schemes.
Jacopo Barigazzi contributed reporting.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
The European Commission will propose joint procurement and development schemes for air defense capabilities for frontline states.
Very likely · Within months
Further drone incursions or hybrid tactics may occur from Russia and Belarus.
Likely · Within weeks
Open Questions
- What specific measures will be discussed to bolster shared defense capabilities?
- What is the exact origin and intent behind the drone incursions?
- What are the potential economic consequences for the Baltic states?
- How will the EU and NATO coordinate their responses to future incidents?






