Estonia has urged Ukraine to adjust the flight paths of its long-range drones attacking Russian targets in the Baltic Sea, to reduce the risk of stray aircraft veering into Estonian airspace.
The request comes as Ukraine steps up strikes on Russia’s oil infrastructure at key Baltic ports, including Ust-Luga and Primorsk, located near Estonia.
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Both ports are major export hubs for Russian oil shipped through the Baltic Sea.
Kyiv has doubled down on attacks targeting Russian oil processing and export facilities, hoping to disrupt Moscow’s shipping and cash flows.
Colonel Ants Kiviselg, head of the Estonian Defense Forces Intelligence Center, said Tallinn had not asked Kyiv to halt the attacks but had recommended safer routes.
“We have recommended choosing attack corridors so that they do not enter Estonian airspace, although it is impossible to completely rule this out,” he told Sunday’s “Ukraina stuudio.”
“Russian air defense activity is certainly also a factor, which is why drones end up here.”
Ukrainian drones have on several occasions flown off course and crashed in Estonia, as well as Latvia, Lithuania and Finland.
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