NATO, Russia and drone
Digest more
An unidentified drone suspected to have come from Belarus entered into Lithuanian airspace on Monday, according a local outlet. Darius Buta, a representative of Lithuania's National Crisis Management Center, told public broadcaster LRT that a drone was spotted at an altitude of approximately 650 feet near the capital city of Vilnius.
1d
Kyiv Independent on MSNUnidentified drone likely enters Lithuania from Belarus amid rising tensions"According to received reports, a drone was spotted at an altitude of about 200 meters, last seen near Vilnius," said Darius Buta, a representative of Lithuania's National Crisis Management Center, according to LRT.
German Vice Chancellor Lars Klingbeil on Tuesday assured fellow NATO members Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia of continued German assistance in light of Russia's expansionist ambitions, as he was in Vilnius for a two-day visit.
Vilnius says it has identified more than ten locations in the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad "from where Russia is causing this interference". View on euronews
Lithuanian Christian Democrats (TSLKD), has introduced a bill that would prohibit Russian passport holders from acti
Lithuania's parliament has designated Russia a terrorist country and its actions in Ukraine as genocide. The Lithuanian Seimas tweeted Tuesday that its members had passed the resolution unanimously.
As Russian dissidents flee their homeland to continue the fight against Russian President Vladimir Putin, many have sheltered in neighboring Lithuania and its capital city, Vilnius. Now, as the ...
Russia’s standoff with Lithuania is part of their rocky relationship that dates back to Moscow’s annexation of the country, along with Estonia and Latvia, in 1940.
Lithuania stopped some goods, like coal and metals, moving over its territory into a Russian region. Russia is angry in response, threatening "a serious negative impact on the population of ...
1d
Daily Express US on MSNVladimir Putin warned tiny NATO nation is 'preparing for war' on Russia's borderVladimir Putin may be growing increasingly worried about a small NATO member on Russia's doorstep that is openly preparing for potential warfare.In what resembles a David versus Goliath standoff, the tiny Baltic state of Lithuania has started boosting military expenditures and conducting war games in response to escalating threats from Moscow.