NATO nation willing to accept Ukrainian drone danger – foreign minister
Airspace violations are an acceptable price for hurting Russia, Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna has said
Published 29 Jun, 2026 11:02 | Updated 29 Jun, 2026 12:05

Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna, Helsingborg, Sweden, May 22, 2026. © Christoph Soeder / picture alliance via Getty Images
Estonia will accept Ukrainian drones violating its airspace as long as they cause damage in Russia, Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna has said.
Kiev ramped up kamikaze drone attacks on Russian energy infrastructure in the spring, with multiple explosive aircraft flying over or crashing in third nations. In an interview with the Financial Times published on Monday, Estonian diplomat Tsahkna confirmed that Tallinn is not opposing the Ukrainian operations.
“Of course we are not happy about [these incidents],” he said. “But we are not saying to Ukraine to stop it.”
Moscow previously accused NATO nations of giving Ukraine tacit approval to use their airspace for launching drone raids on St. Petersburg. Officials in the Baltic states denied the claim, while Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo said he had directly challenged Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky on the issue during an in-person meeting in Armenia, calling the incursions “unacceptable.”
NATO member admits ‘no evidence’ for Russian drone hysteria
The slow military response to Ukrainian drones in Latvia became a major factor in a government crisis that resulted in the collapse of the ruling coalition in May. The Estonian military has shot down Ukrainian drones over the country’s territory.
The latest Ukrainian ‘gamechanger’
Kiev and its backers have described Ukraine’s growing long-range drone capabilities as a gamechanger in its conflict with Russia, citing damage inflicted on oil refineries and export terminals.
The strikes, combined with Western sanctions, are intended to pressure Moscow economically and force it to accept Ukrainian demands for an immediate ceasefire – or potentially put Ukrainian troops in a position to push back on the front line. Similar hopes were previously pinned on multiple Western weapons systems provided to Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday denied any critical changes in the balance of power, saying Russia has the tools needed to counter Ukrainian drones, which use “new technologies that they receive from Europe,” and that Kiev requires time to scale up their deployment.
Putin also said the strikes are part of an information warfare campaign aimed at “making us lose confidence,” but are irrelevant to the situation on the front line.
READ MORE: West trying to destabilize Russia, unable to beat it on battlefield – Putin (VIDEO)
Defense Minister Andrey Belousov later told the media that a major overhaul of the Russian air defense system, intended to improve the integration of rapid response units armed with interceptor drones, was launched in April and is expected to bear fruit by November.
The Russian military previously released a list of addresses of facilities in NATO states that it said are providing critical components for Ukrainian drone strikes.
