The European Union accuses Russia of allegedly interfering with the navigation system of a aircraft carrying the European Fee president on Sunday.
JUANA SUMMERS, HOST:
The European Union is blasting Russia for allegedly interfering with the navigation system of a aircraft carrying the European Fee president yesterday. She was visiting international locations on the bloc’s jap flank. Teri Schultz reviews it is simply the newest act of sabotage on European targets that is been attributed to Moscow.
TERI SCHULTZ, BYLINE: European Fee President Ursula von der Leyen’s aircraft needed to circle for an additional hour earlier than it may deposit her and her staff safely within the Bulgarian capital. With its GPS system jammed, journalists on board the flight mentioned the pilots needed to pull out paper maps to make the touchdown at Plovdiv Airport in Sofia. Nearly 24 hours after the incident, Bulgaria pointed a finger on the Kremlin, accusing it of being accountable. European Fee spokesperson Arianna Podesta condemned the act as a part of the threats and intimidations which have turn into, quote, “an everyday part of Russia’s hostile conduct.”
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
ARIANNA PODESTA: This incident truly underlines the urgency of the mission that the president is finishing up within the front-line member states as of late. There she has seen firsthand the on a regular basis challenges of threats coming from Russia and its proxies.
SCHULTZ: Moscow has not publicly responded to those allegations, however Podesta says, if Russian actors are responsible and thought Europeans could be intimidated by the harmful stunt, they’re unsuitable.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
PODESTA: This may solely reinforce even additional our unshakable dedication to ramp up protection capabilities and assist for Ukraine. And naturally, the EU will proceed to speculate into protection spending and in Europe’s readiness much more after this incident.
SCHULTZ: It could even be a wake-up name for these Europeans who doubt the risk Russia can pose to on a regular basis life, says Vessela Tcherneva, the deputy director of the European Council on International Relations, based mostly in Sofia. Tcherneva says regardless of a rising variety of small assaults of sabotage all through Europe linked to Russia, public opinion in some international locations remains to be divided about how you can reply and the necessity to defend their societies.
VESSELA TCHERNEVA: I hope ultimately, it should produce a brand new coverage that’s going to contribute to the resilience of the international locations, particularly these right here across the entrance line. And I am not speaking about – merely about GPS jamming, you already know, however in regards to the plethora of prospects for hybrid assaults that may actually undermine residents’ safety.
SCHULTZ: However at the same time as Russia is being blamed for staging the jamming assault, Tcherneva says there could also be home repercussions as nicely. Opposition politicians are calling for the top of Bulgaria’s nationwide intelligence company to resign for failing to cease Sunday’s incident.
For NPR Information, I am Teri Schultz in Brussels.
Copyright © 2025 NPR. All rights reserved. Go to our web site phrases of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for additional info.
Accuracy and availability of NPR transcripts might differ. Transcript textual content could also be revised to right errors or match updates to audio. Audio on npr.org could also be edited after its unique broadcast or publication. The authoritative document of NPR’s programming is the audio document.