Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk has urged NATO to take growing “provocations” from Russia more seriously after a senior Moscow official warned the “peaceful sleep of EU citizens” was over amid a series of drone incidents on the alliance’s eastern flank.

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of Russia’s powerful Security Council, warned European leaders on Friday that drone incidents would “continue to happen” after a Russian drone crashed into an apartment block in Romania during an attack on neighboring Ukraine. 

“Let them get ready: this will continue to happen,” Medvedev said in a statement. “There is a war going on! And the citizens of EU states, as the population of the belligerent countries, will not be able to sleep peacefully,” he added. 

Advertisement

Medvedev, a former Russian president, accused European governments of participating in the war against Ukraine by supplying Kyiv with drones, weapons and intelligence. 

‘More and more provocations’ 

Tusk responded on Saturday, urging NATO to respond more urgently to what he described as Russia’s growing provocations along the alliance’s eastern flank and its increasingly hostile rhetoric. 

“Poland, Baltic states, now Romania. More and more Russian provocations,” Tusk wrote on X. 

“Yesterday, the former [Russian] president Dmitry Medvedev said that the peaceful sleep of EU citizens is over. Everyone in NATO should finally start taking these facts and words seriously,” he added. 

Russia Could Attack NATO One Year After Ukraine War: Dutch Govt
Other Topics of Interest

Russia Could Attack NATO One Year After Ukraine War: Dutch Govt

The warning comes as NATO members prepare for a summit in the Turkish capital Ankara on July 7-8 during which the threat from Moscow will be high on the agenda.

Major escalation 

Russian drone crashed into an apartment block in the southeastern Romanian city of Galați in the early hours of Friday during an attack on neighboring Ukraine. 

Romania’s defense ministry said a woman and a child were injured in the incident. 

Romania, a member of both NATO and the European Union, shares a 650-kilometer land border with Ukraine and has repeatedly reported Russian drones breaching its airspace as Moscow attacks Ukrainian ports across the Danube River. 

Advertisement

But Friday’s incident was the first time a densely populated area in a NATO country had been hit during Russia’s war in Ukraine, causing injuries. 

Romanian President Nicușor Dan called the drone crash the “most serious incident” since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. 

NATO accused Russia of “reckless” behavior and pledged to “defend every inch of Allied territory.” 

To suggest a correction or clarification, write to us here
You can also highlight the text and press Ctrl + Enter