How air-defence failures brought down Latvia’s government — and opened the door to Russia to exploit
This story is a part of the weekly newsletter about economy, defence, and tech in the eastern flank of Nato, How we cee it . As runners scrambled to push for their best times at the Riga Marathon, the

This story is a part of the weekly newsletter about economy, defence, and tech in the eastern flank of Nato, How we cee it . As runners scrambled to push for their best times at the Riga Marathon, they passed a man holding a seemingly supportive message: “You’re Running Better Than The Government.” The joke wouldn’t normally make international news, were it not for the fact that the man holding the sign was Andris Šuvajevs, the head of the Latvian Progressive Party, whose government was in the m
Air alerts have become a fairly regular occurrence in all three Baltic states. As Ukrainian drones fly to deliver attacks in the richest regions of Russia, namely St Petersburg and Moscow, they sometimes fall victim to Russian electronic warfare and stray from their route. This has resulted in numerous drone incidents across Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. But while Latvian neighbours such as Estonia have largely managed to shoot down incoming drones, Latvian armed forces have stuck largely to observing. This has become an increasingly frustrating experience for many Latvians, especially after seeing the rampant increase in defence expenses in the country, which today reach nearly five percent of its GDP. Never before has more money been invested in defence in the whole of Latvia’s independent history. Moreover, the Latvian ministry of defence has also boasted for several years about investing in Latvian drone capabilities and making the country something of a drone powerhouse. But the expenses have not seemingly translated into better protection for the people whose taxes pay for them. “I’ve received those alert messages as well while being in eastern Latvia. People are truly concerned that the messages come and go, and the interception success rate is zero to this date,” says Maris Andžans, director of the Center for Geopolitical Studies in Riga. “It’s been shown that the ’emperor has no clothes’,” he adds. “Latvia obviously has some good producers of land, sea and air drones, but that does not translate into anti-drone capabilities,” Andžans explains.
Key points
- Air alerts have become a fairly regular occurrence in all three Baltic states.
- As Ukrainian drones fly to deliver attacks in the richest regions of Russia, namely St Petersburg and Moscow, they sometimes fall victim to Russian electronic warfare and stray from their route.
- This has resulted in numerous drone incidents across Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
- But while Latvian neighbours such as Estonia have largely managed to shoot down incoming drones, Latvian armed forces have stuck largely to observing.
- This has become an increasingly frustrating experience for many Latvians, especially after seeing the rampant increase in defence expenses in the country, which today reach nearly five percent of i…
This article was independently rewritten by ManyPress editorial AI from reporting originally published by EUobserver.



