NATO scrambled fighter jets in Polish and Romanian airspace overnight as Russia carried out massive drone and missile strikes in western Ukraine, killing at least 25 people, three of them children, APA reports, citing CNN.
Romania’s defense ministry said a Russian drone entered its airspace during the attack, striking apartment buildings in the western city of Ternopil, killing 25 people and injuring dozens more, according to Ukraine’s emergency service.
Video from the scene showed smoke rising from the collapsed buildings. Ukraine’s emergency services said rescue operations were continuing.
Russia’s attacks have mostly targeted the eastern part of the country and many Ukrainians have fled to the west, seeing it as safer.
Dozens of people were also wounded in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, where drone strikes damaged apartment buildings and left several cars burning on the streets.
Romania’s defense ministry said it scrambled two Eurofighters, part of NATO’s fleet, and later two Romanian F-16 fighter jets after a Russian drone was detected crossing into the eastern Tulcea region.
Polish and allied fighter jets were also launched to protect Polish airspace on Wednesday morning, the country’s operational command said.
The latest aerial attack came hours after Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Türkiye to meet with his counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan as he tries to “reinvigorate” peace talks and prisoner of war exchanges with Russia. Moscow is not involved in those talks, but Türkiye has been a key interlocutor between the two.
Meanwhile, Russia said it shot down four US-made ATACMS long-range missiles “deep within” its territory on Tuesday, that Ukraine claimed it fired. The missiles were taken down over the city of Voronezh, around 200 kilometers (124 miles) from the Ukrainian border, the Russian defense ministry said.
The use of the missiles, which have a range of up to 300 kilometers (186 miles), was first approved under the Biden Presidency and their use has previously been seen by Russia as a major escalation.
Poland’s Rzeszow and Lublin airports, in the country’s east, were also closed “due to the need to ensure freedom of operation for military aviation,” the country’s air navigation service PANSA said on X. They were later reopened.
The latest move by NATO comes during a tense week. Polish officials have pointed the finger at Russia after a key train track was destroyed in what Warsaw said was an “unprecedented act of sabotage” committed by two Ukrainian citizens who were “collaborating with Russian services.” Russian officials have denied the accusation.
On Wednesday, Poland’s Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski said he would close the last Russian consulate in the country in response to the destruction of the train track. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov expressed regret over the move.
On Tuesday, the US State Department approved a possible $105 million sale that would allow Ukraine to upgrade its Patriot air defense system – a critical shield against Russian aerial attacks.
“The proposed sale will improve Ukraine’s ability to meet current and future threats by further equipping it to conduct self-defense and regional security missions with a more robust local sustainment capability,” said a Pentagon statement.
NATO allies have increasingly scrambled fighter jets in recent months during Russian attacks on Ukraine, or when stray Russian munitions, drones and warplanes have either strayed too close, or across, their borders.
Poland has also been acutely on edge over Russia’s war in Ukraine.
In September, jets shot down multiple Russian drones that violated Polish airspace during an attack on neighboring Ukraine, as the military alliance denounced Moscow for “absolutely dangerous” behavior that ratcheted up tensions to a new level.
The operation marked the first time that shots were fired by NATO since the start of the war in Ukraine.