Russian drones entered two NATO countries.

Russian drones entered Latvia and Romania

Russian drones entered two NATO countries. After one Russian drone crashed in eastern Latvia the day before and another flew into Romania during an overnight strike on neighboring Ukraine, two NATO nations claimed on Sunday that Russian drones had breached their airspace.

Romania's National Defense Ministry said a drone entered Romanian territory early on Sunday, just days after Moscow attacked civilian facilities and port infrastructure across the country in Ukraine. It added that it has deployed F-16 warplanes to monitor its airspace and issued text alerts to residents of two eastern regions.

Additionally, it stated that Romania was looking at a potential impact zone in an unpopulated area near the Ukrainian border. No early reports of forces or casualties were available.

A day after it had crashed close to the town of Rezekne, Latvia's Defense Minister Andris Sprūds revealed later on Sunday that the drone, which was probably brought to Latvia from Belarus, a neighboring country, was Russian.

With a population of more than 25,000, Rezekne is located approximately 55 kilometers (34 miles) west of Russia and approximately 75 kilometers (47 miles) east of Belarus, a close and crucial ally of the Kremlin.

Although the invasion of Latvian airspace seems to be an isolated incident, Romania has reported multiple times as recently as July this year that drone fragments have fallen on its territory since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

NATO'S Reaction

According to Mircea Geoană, the departing deputy secretary-general of NATO and a former senior diplomat for Romania, the military alliance criticizes Russia's breaking a rule of Romanian airspace. He made this announcement on Sunday morning. "While we have no information indicating an intentional attack by Russia against Allies, these acts are irresponsible and potentially dangerous," he posted on the social media site X.


US Researchers Find Secret Russian Location With Nuclear Missile Launching Capability

Russian Location With Nuclear Missile

US Researchers Find Secret Russian Location With Nuclear Missile Launching Capability, Two U.S. researchers have located the likely Russian deployment location of the 9M730 Burevestnik missile, a new nuclear-armed cruise missile that President Vladimir Putin has referred to as "invincible" and purportedly fueled by nuclear energy. According to Putin, the weapon NATO has dubbed the SSC-X-9 Skyfall can avoid American missile defenses and has an almost infinite range. However, several Western analysts contest his assertions and the Burevestnik's strategic significance, arguing that it will not confer any new capabilities upon Moscow and runs the risk of causing a radioactive accident.

A commercial satellite company, the two researchers determined that the new missile's possible launch location would be a building project next to a nuclear weapon storage facility known by two names: Vologda-20 and Chebsara. Moscow lies 475 kilometers north of the facility.

An inquiry regarding his judgment, the strategic significance of Burevestnik, its test history, and the hazards it presents was not answered by the Russian defense ministry or the embassy in Washington.

According to a Kremlin official, these were questions for the defense ministry, which declined to comment further.

Why it's happening

This trend coincides with Russia's increased military exercises and nuclear posture. Citing alleged threats from Western nations, Russia revealed intentions to conduct a tactical nuclear weapons exercise in May. The action of Russia seen as a direct threat coming from the West's statements, which are provocative and threats to Russia.