On Air Now

John Clayton

3:00pm - 6:00pm

  • 01723 336444

Now Playing

Alesha Dixon

The Boy Does Nothing

Download

Sky News joins NATO air patrol designed to deter Russia from pushing boundaries

Saturday, 4 October 2025 02:23

By Diana Magnay, international correspondent

Out of the darkness, flashing bars of red and blue, followed by the black, avian-like forms of two Typhoon fighter jets, emerge and glide side-long towards our plane.

One suddenly turns on its wing and dips below us, reappearing alongside our other flank, its sharp nose seeming to reach out for the nozzle of an outstretched hose which trails from the wings of our RAF Voyager jet like a jellyfish on a long tentacle, tossed about by savage currents.

Air-to-air refuelling at high speeds and in high winds looks, from my perspective less than 10m away, fiendishly hard.

It takes several minutes and several attempts before the pilot finally manages to latch the probe on the side of their jet on to the fuel hose nozzle and start to fill up, guzzling as much as four tonnes of fuel in one go.

But this is what they're trained for: highly technical manoeuvres at high speeds. The two RAF Typhoons on mission with us will refuel four times that night. It's a force multiplier. It means they'll be in the air and on patrol that much longer.

We're flying on a nighttime mission over Poland as part of NATO's Operation Eastern Sentry.

The RAF is supplying Typhoon fighter jets and refuelling capabilities to help patrol the skies and bolster NATO's eastern flank after Russia sent scores of drones into NATO territory on 10 September, the first time the alliance has had to deal with a coordinated and deliberate drone incursion into its airspace.

They were inexpensive Gerbera decoy drones, a way of testing NATO's defences and a warning from the Kremlin that Russia can do much worse in the way of drone warfare if European leaders continue to pour money and weapons into Ukraine.

Yes, the Typhoons can down any airborne threat, drones included, given they have Advanced Short Range Air-to-Air Missiles (ASRAAM) and a 27mm Mauser cannon.

Yes, that is a significant amount of firepower to use against what could end up being just an unarmed piece of plywood with a GPS tracker on it.

But this is an exercise in deterrence, to let Russia know that NATO is alert and ready, as European leaders gather to discuss how best to defend against drones beyond conventional air defence.

For that, they're employing Ukraine's hard-won expertise, developed beneath the misery of their drone-filled skies.

Read more:
Airport drone sightings - what we know
Putin issues defiant message

Russia's warning shot to NATO

Germany and Denmark are both reporting unidentified drone sightings over key installations, forcing them to close airspace including, temporarily, Copenhagen and Munich airports. Estonia escorted Russian MiG fighter jets from its airspace after a 12-minute incursion.

Russia is pushing boundaries, a warning shot to NATO as it deliberates support for Ukraine. Moscow, of course, denies all this.

For Vladimir Putin NATO is war-mongering. "We're closely monitoring the growing militarisation of Europe. Is this just talk, or is it time for us to take countermeasures?" he asked the audience at the annual Valdai meeting, a veiled threat if ever there was one.

But that is the status quo between Russia and NATO. Veiled threats and hybrid warfare, with drones a new weapon in Russia's arsenal.

NATO hopes to make Putin recognise limitations of his armed forces

As French President Emmanuel Macron said, NATO's best defence is "more unpredictability and more strategic ambiguity".

And images of what NATO is capable of, the mastery of its fighter jets, the coordinated armies within its command and their shared commitment to common defence, those are intended to make Russia's leader take stock and recognise the limitations of his exhausted and overstretched armed forces.

Whether they do or not, well - that is a completely different matter.

Sky News

(c) Sky News 2025: Sky News joins NATO air patrol designed to deter Russia from pushing boundaries

Did you find this article useful?

This is the Coast is committed to providing a daily local news service for the Yorkshire Coast. We are a small locally owned and operated business which employs professional journalists and reporters. We do not receive any public funding or grants and we are entirely funded by our local commercial operations. We enjoy fabulous support from local businesses who work with us on their advertising and marketing campaigns, but the cost of providing high quality, well researched, fact checked local news coverage is significant.

If you appreciate what This is the Coast does, and would like to help support our journalism, please consider supporting us on a monthly basis today.

A small contribution from all our readers would really help support independent journalism for the Yorkshire Coast.

More from World News

Follow Us

Get Our Apps

Our Apps are now available for iOS, Android and Smart Speakers.

  • Available on the App Store
  • Available on Google Play
  • Just ask Amazon Alexa
  • Available on Roku

Today's Weather

  • Scarborough

    Medium-level cloud

    High: 14°C | Low: 10°C

  • Filey

    Medium-level cloud

    High: 14°C | Low: 9°C

  • Whitby

    Medium-level cloud

    High: 14°C | Low: 10°C

  • Bridlington

    Medium-level cloud

    High: 14°C | Low: 9°C

  • Hornsea

    Medium-level cloud

    High: 14°C | Low: 9°C

  • Driffield

    Medium-level cloud

    High: 14°C | Low: 9°C

News