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NATO jets scrambled to intercept Russian spyplane as Kremlin threatens ‘direct' response to military buildup on border

NATO jets scrambled to intercept Russian spyplane as Kremlin threatens ‘direct' response to military buildup on border

The Irish Sun28-06-2025
GERMAN fighter jets were dramatically scrambled to intercept a Russian spy plane over the Baltic Sea.
It came just hours before the Kremlin warned of a 'direct' response to NATO's growing presence on its doorstep.
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German fighter jets were scrambled to intercept a Russian Il-20 spy plane over the Baltic Sea (stock picture)
Credit: AP:Associated Press
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It came after Putin's Kremlin threatened a 'direct' response to military buildup on border
Credit: Getty
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Two Eurofighters (stock picture) roared into action after NATO radar spotted the Russian spy plane
Credit: PA
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Two Eurofighters roared into action on Friday after NATO radar spotted a Russian Il-20 with its transponder switched off.
The plane had taken off from Kaliningrad and was heading west toward Poland and Germany, according to Bild and
Germany's quick reaction team made visual contact about 100km off the coast.
They snapped a photo before the lumbering Russian aircraft turned north, skirting just 40km from the Baltic island of Usedom but staying out of German airspace.
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It's the ninth time this year German jets have been scrambled to shadow Moscow's snoopers.
NATO says the Kremlin is using these flights to test alliance defences and gather intel on troop positions as the Ukraine war drags on.
The airborne drama came as Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov slammed Estonia's willingness to host NATO aircraft armed with nuclear weapons, branding it a 'direct' danger to Moscow.
'Directly, of course,' he said, when asked if such a move posed a threat, Russian news agency
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Peskov sneered that Baltic leaders often make 'absurd' statements, and added icy relations could scarcely get any worse: 'It is very difficult to do anything worse.'
Humiliation for Putin as £37m jets destroyed in strike before vengeful tyrant kills two in blitz on Ukraine tower block
Tallinn's Defence Minister Hanno Pevkur had earlier revealed Estonia is ready to welcome NATO jets capable of carrying tactical nuclear bombs — pointing to recent visits by US F-35s that could soon be guarding the tiny nation's skies again.
It comes amid mounting alarm that Vladimir Putin is readying Russia for a showdown with NATO itself.
Bruno Kahl, head of Germany's foreign intelligence service,
NATO chief Mark Rutte piled on the pressure, saying the alliance must brace for the possibility of a Russian attack by 2030.
Putin's forces have already begun amassing hardware and troops close to Finland, just 35 miles from the border, according to satellite snaps showing activity at four Russian bases — Kamenka, Petrozavodsk, Severomorsk-2 and Olenya.
Defence experts fear Moscow may attempt to provoke NATO into a limited clash, testing the alliance's Article 5 pledge of mutual defence without triggering full-scale war.
Meanwhile on the battlefield, Putin's summer push in Ukraine is grinding on at a snail's pace, with Kyiv's fierce drone attacks bogging down Russian advances.
After 448 days of fighting in Chasiv Yar in Donetsk, Moscow's troops reportedly control just half the city — clawing back land at a rate so slow that even snails would outpace them.
But with an estimated 125,000 Russian soldiers massing along Ukraine's Sumy and Kharkiv borders, Kyiv is bracing for what could be Putin's last big gamble to seize ground before negotiating a ceasefire.
Ukrainian commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrsky said his forces had managed to pin down a 50,000-strong Russian assault near Sumy, stabilising the lines for now.
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Bruno Kahl, head of Berlin's Federal Intelligence Service, said his team have intel suggesting Russia is plotting to test the resolve of Nato in the coming years
Credit: Alamy
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A Russian drone strike on Kyiv overnight left dozens of residential buildings crumbling
Credit: AP
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Ukraine is often left battling Putin's continued drone attacks
Credit: Getty
Back in Germany, Chancellor Friedrich Merz poured more cold water on any thaw with Moscow, telling Süddeutsche Zeitung he won't pick up the phone to Putin given Russia's relentless bombing of Ukraine.
His predecessor Olaf Scholz had broken ranks last year by speaking with the Kremlin tyrant — but Merz insisted the time for friendly calls is over.
As Putin's bombers continue to pound Kyiv and Odesa with hundreds of drones and missiles every night, NATO eyes remain fixed on the Baltic and beyond — wary that Moscow's next gambit could spark the very clash the world fears most.
It comes after Ukraine landed another humiliating blow on Vlad's war machine —
Kyiv's forces targeted the Marinovka military airfield in the Volgograd region, flying drones 200 miles to smash four of the £37million jets.
Two were destroyed outright, while the other pair were damaged, sending pro-war Russian Telegram channels into meltdown over the 'multi-billion dollar' losses.
Furious Kremlin cheerleaders raged the attack 'could and should have been prevented.'
Ukraine's SBU boasted the strike sparked a fire in critical infrastructure used to prep and repair Russian warplanes.
Putin lashed out in brutal revenge. Overnight, Russia flattened a 21-storey tower block in Odesa, killing a married couple and wounding at least 14 others — including three children.
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Ex-KGB officer gives chilling warning ahead of Trump-Putin showdown – and claims ‘manipulative' Vlad has ‘already won'
Ex-KGB officer gives chilling warning ahead of Trump-Putin showdown – and claims ‘manipulative' Vlad has ‘already won'

The Irish Sun

time2 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Ex-KGB officer gives chilling warning ahead of Trump-Putin showdown – and claims ‘manipulative' Vlad has ‘already won'

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Putin begins journey to Alaska for Trump war talks – but keeps up Ukraine onslaught as Doomsday Radio bursts into life
Putin begins journey to Alaska for Trump war talks – but keeps up Ukraine onslaught as Doomsday Radio bursts into life

The Irish Sun

time32 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Putin begins journey to Alaska for Trump war talks – but keeps up Ukraine onslaught as Doomsday Radio bursts into life

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Why the Trump-Putin meeting worries Europe
Why the Trump-Putin meeting worries Europe

RTÉ News​

time2 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Why the Trump-Putin meeting worries Europe

Confirmation last week that US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin would hold a summit in Alaska raised a red flag for Europe and Ukraine. With no Ukrainian or European involvement, and the expiry of a US deadline to impose sanctions on Moscow coming to nothing, it looked like Russia was getting it all its own way. Ukraine and Europe's chief concern for most of the past week has been that Mr Trump and Mr Putin could strike a deal in Alaska that would force Ukraine to cede about one-fifth of its territory to Russia - regions in eastern and southern Ukraine currently occupied by Russian forces. There would be some "land swapping", Mr Trump told reporters in the White House earlier this week. It was beginning to sound like another Yalta, the conference held in Crimea in February 1945 between Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin where the two Western allies gave in to the Soviet leader's demands to redraw the map of Eastern Europe and control it. Of course, Russia's leader wants more Ukrainian land than the 19% currently occupied by his forces. He wants Ukraine to withdraw entirely from the four regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia and to have Russia's annexation of those regions, along with Crimea, internationally recognised as the main price for stopping the war. Official recognition of Russian control of any seized territory is unacceptable for Europe, and naturally for Ukraine. Problematically for Europe, in April the Trump administration offered the Kremlin a very generous deal to stop the war that reportedly included official US recognition of Russia's control of Crimea and de facto recognition of Russian-occupied territory in eastern and southern Ukraine. US recognition of Crimea still on table Though Russia rejected the offer at the time, the US position had not changed. That would mean that official US recognition of Crimea as part of Russia is still on the table. In the eyes of European governments, allowing Russia to change international borders through force would simply embolden Mr Putin to rearm and invade Ukraine again in the coming years, and next time take it all. Or Russia could threaten the security of a NATO member state in Eastern Europe. Either scenario threatens the future of European security. It explains why this week there was a flurry of diplomatic activity in European capitals to impress upon Mr Trump the need to distrust the Russian leader's assurances. On Tuesday, the leaders of all EU member states except Hungary endorsed a letter supporting Ukraine's right to decide its own future and also that any diplomatic solution to the war in Ukraine must protect the security interests of Ukrainians and Europeans - which brings Ukraine's future security needs a step closer to Europe's. Then followed a meeting called by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz between Mr Trump, other European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Trump now reading territorial issue European lobbying seems to have had an effect on how Mr Trump is now reading the territorial issue. According to sources familiar with the meeting, the US president told the other leaders during Wednesday's call that he would not negotiate a division of Ukrainian territory. That assurance bodes well for Ukraine and Europe. It was also reported by US media that Mr Trump told the other attendees that the US could play a role in offering a security guarantee to Ukraine, though no details have emerged of what level of engagement that might be. If that is the case, then it would be the first time that Mr Trump has committed to protecting Ukraine's post-war security alongside the Europeans. There is also a strong possibility that during the Alaska meeting Mr Putin will bring up Russia's original list of demands given to the Biden administration in December 2021 just two months before Russia invaded Ukraine. Presented by Russian officials at the time as a formula for decreasing geopolitical tension in Europe, one of the demands required the West to give security guarantees to Russia. In reality, the demands looked like a Russian attempt to regain its former sphere of influence over all of Eastern Europe. The most notable demand was for NATO to withdraw its troops and weapons from countries in Eastern Europe that joined the alliance from the late 1990s onwards. Doing so would leave countries like Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia particularly exposed to the threat of Russian aggression. For almost 80 years, the US has provided Europe (first Western Europe and then Eastern Europe from the late 1990s onwards) with a security guarantee, and American and European leaders have always worked in lockstep when it comes to the continent's security. Mr Trump is the first post-war US president to cast doubts about the future of that ironclad security guarantee, leading to commitments earlier this year from European governments to ramp up spending on their national defence budgets. Another point of concern for Europe is that some kind of economic deal between the US and Russia could come from the Alaska meeting. This scenario would be to the detriment of US-Europe relations given that the Europe is already hitting Russia with heavy sanctions. Back in March when the Trump-Putin relationship had briefly blossomed, the White House spoke about the "enormous economic deals" that could arise from better US-Russia relations. At the same time, Mr Putin spoke about the possibility of energy sector cooperation. Not surprisingly, the Kremlin returned to the theme of US-Russia economic cooperation this week. Yesterday, a senior member of the Russian delegation was talking about the "huge untapped potential" of trade cooperation between the two countries. That kind of talk will make Europe feel nervous that Mr Trump could preference business over decades-old alliances. Mr Putin is bringing both Russia's finance minister and the head of Russia's direct investment fund as part of his delegation which indicates that Russia is going to lay out business opportunities for the US. Mr Trump is a businessman and may be won over. But just as Mr Trump is unpredictable, so too is the outcome of the meeting later today at the Elmendorf-Richardson Joint Base outside Anchorage. European leaders, like the rest of us, will have to wait and see what Mr Trump and Mr Putin agree upon and what it will mean for Ukraine.

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