EU ‘must respond’ to Russia’s ‘hybrid warfare’: von der Leyen

EU ‘must respond’ to Russia’s ‘hybrid warfare’: von der Leyen
EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen delivers a speech during a plenary session at the European Parliament, in Strasbourg, eastern France. (AFP)
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Updated 08 October 2025
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EU ‘must respond’ to Russia’s ‘hybrid warfare’: von der Leyen

EU ‘must respond’ to Russia’s ‘hybrid warfare’: von der Leyen
  • EU leaders will seek at a summit in Brussels later this month to agree on a “road map” aimed at getting the bloc ready to ward off threats from Russia in the coming years
  • The commission president insisted that tackling “Russia’s hybrid war” requires “a completely new mindset for all of us”

STRASBOURG: EU chief Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday said Europe must ramp up its defenses to deter Russia’s “hybrid warfare,” after a catalogue of air incursions, cyberattacks and damage to undersea cables.
“These incidents are calculated to linger in the twilight of deniability. This is not random harassment. It is a coherent and escalating campaign,” the European Commission head said in a speech to EU lawmakers.
“Two incidents are coincidence, but three, five, 10 — this is a deliberate and targeted grey zone campaign against Europe, and Europe must respond,” she said.
EU countries Poland, Estonia and Romania have recently been rattled by Russian air incursions, while unidentified drones have been spotted in Denmark, Germany and Belgium.
European countries have already increased defense spending to post-Cold War highs in the face of Moscow’s war in Ukraine and doubts over US support under President Donald Trump.
Now the EU is seeking to hammer out plans for joint projects that could be built by the 27-nation bloc — including a “wall” of anti-drone defenses.
“We must not only react. We must deter because if we hesitate to act, the grey zone will only expand,” von der Leyen said.
“The founding mission of the European Union is to preserve peace, and today that means having the capacity to deter aggression and provocation.”
EU leaders will seek at a summit in Brussels later this month to agree on a “road map” aimed at getting the bloc ready to ward off threats from Russia in the coming years.
“This will not only set common objectives, but also very concrete milestones and timelines on the way to 2030 because we all know only what gets measured gets really done,” von der Leyen said.
The commission president insisted that tackling “Russia’s hybrid war” requires “a completely new mindset for all of us.”
“The choice before us is very simple. We either can shy away and watch Russian threats escalate, or we meet them with unity, deterrence and resolve,” von der Leyen said.


North Korean and Russian military officials discuss further cooperation in Pyongyang

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North Korean and Russian military officials discuss further cooperation in Pyongyang

North Korean and Russian military officials discuss further cooperation in Pyongyang
SEOUL: Senior North Korean and Russian military officials discussed strengthening cooperation in their latest talks this week in Pyongyang, North Korean state media said Friday, as the two countries continue to align over Russia’s war in Ukraine.
The report came days after South Korea’s spy agency, in a closed-door briefing to lawmakers, said it had detected signs of recruitment and training activities in North Korea, possibly in preparation for additional troop deployments to Russia.
North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency said North Korean officials, led by Pak Yong Il, vice director of the Korean People’s Army’s General Political Bureau, held talks Wednesday with a Russian delegation headed by Vice Defense Minister Viktor Goremykin.
KCNA said the two sides discussed expanding cooperation in line with the “deepened bilateral relations” developed under North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The report didn’t mention any specific agreements. KCNA also said Goremykin’s delegation separately met with North Korean Defense Minister No Kwang Chol on Thursday.
When asked whether North Korean and Russian officials may have discussed additional North Korean troop deployments to Russia, Chang Yoon-jeong, a spokesperson for South Korea’s Unification Ministry, said Seoul was closely monitoring the situation but wouldn’t make assumptions.
The North Korean-Russian meetings came days after US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth traveled to South Korea for annual security talks between the allies on Tuesday and praised South Korean plans to raise its military spending in the face of threats by nuclear-armed North Korea and other regional uncertainties.
According to South Korean assessments, North Korea has sent around 15,000 troops to Russia since last fall and also supplied large quantities of military equipment, including artillery and ballistic missiles to support Moscow’s war against Ukraine. Kim has also agreed to send thousands of military construction workers and deminers to Russia’s Kursk region.
In its briefing to lawmakers on Tuesday, South Korea’s National Intelligence Service said it also believes around 5,000 North Korean military construction troops have been moving to Russia in phases since September for possible deployment in infrastructure restoration projects.