Estonia and Latvia say Russian drones hit their NATO base amid major offensive in Ukraine

Kyiv – NATO members Estonia and Latvia said Russian drones had entered their territory on Wednesday morning after Russia’s biggest offensive against Ukraine since the inauguration of Vladimir Putin. full invasion of his country four years ago.
Estonia’s Internal Security Service said a drone had entered the country from Russia and crashed into a power station chimney, hours after the Latvian military reported that a Russian drone had shot down a plane in the country’s territory without causing damage.
Russian drones and even fighter jets they entered NATO airspace by going during the entire war. Members of the transatlantic defense alliance reported 18 airspace violations by Russian aircraft in 2025, three times more than in 2024.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the attack an escalation Russian warhe has been arguing that it is against all of Europe, and he has urged his European colleagues to do the same strengthen their air defenses.
The latest drone attack came hours after Russia’s largest airstrikes in Ukraine since the start of the war. As of Monday evening, Russia has launched about 1,000 drones in Ukraine, according to the Ukrainian Air Force. More than 550 drones were launched on Tuesday afternoon alone, mainly in the western regions of Ukraine, near its borders with NATO member countries.
Oleksandr Hryvul/Worldwide Pictures Ukraine/Getty
A video clip broadcast by Ukrainian public broadcaster on Tuesday showed an Iranian-made Shahed drone, a weapon Russia has used extensively during the war, hitting a building near a church in the historic center of Lviv, just 40 miles from the Polish border.
City officials said a second drone crashed into an apartment building in Lviv, injuring 22 people. In nearby Ivano-Frankivsk, a maternity hospital was damaged.
Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha drew parallels between Russia’s attacks and those carried out by the Russian coalition. Iran against the infrastructure of the people of the Persian Gulf.
“Russia is doing well what the Iranian regime is doing in the Middle Eastbut in central Europe. Russia is proving its status as a terrorist state,” Sybiha said in a social media post. “And this is how it should be dealt with – with strength, not weakness, and increasing pressure on all sides.”
In his late night speech, Zelenskyy said on Tuesday that Russia was there is confirmed by the Trump administration’s recent easing of oil sanctionsand reiterated his long-held view that Putin’s increasing aggression is a threat to countries beyond Ukraine.
“Pressure is clearly lacking at the moment. On the contrary, there are signs encouraging Russia to continue what it has been doing for years, increasing its aggression,” said Zelenskyy. “This is dangerous for everyone.”


