In Estonia, the Isamaa opposition party has initiated a bill that would direct the parliament to instruct the government to close the Estonian-Russian border, according to ERR. The Isamaa leader, Urmas Reinsalu,
The Basmanny District Court of Moscow arrested Maria Smorzhevskikh-Smirnova, director of the Narva Museum in Estonia, in absentia in the case of spreading “fakes about the Russian army.” — Ukrinform.
The mission, dubbed Baltic Sentry, follows worry over increased Russian military activity near key undersea communication cables.
The Ryanair flight from the UK was forced to abort its landing and divert to Poland following mysterious interference just as it was about to touch down in Lithuania
The survival of Estonia, Europe and the broader Western world hinges on resisting the dangerous allure of appeasement in the face of authoritarian aggression. As Russia deepens alliances with states like Iran and North Korea while benefiting from China's economic support,
Chinese researchers apply for patents for ‘submarine cable cutting devices,’ while Russian experts boast on television that cable-cutting will
Estonia's irregular border crossings dropped by 43 percent last year, data from the Police and Border Guard Board (PPA) show. The figures are in line with the European Union-wide trend but are significantly lower than in countries closer to home.
The foreign minister of the Baltic state of Estonia says the presence of North Korean troops in the western Russian region of Kursk has changed the core of what he described as "Russia's aggression."
On Christmas Day, authorities in Estonia and Finland noted the sudden interruption of the Estlink 2 undersea electricity cable linking their two nations - just as ship tracking data showed the Cook Islands-registered "Eagle S" passing outbound from Russia’s Baltic coast en route to Egypt.
GPS navigation interference in Eastern Europe is a "relatively small problem" for Ryanair at the moment, its chief commercial officer said on Tuesday, after a couple of its flights were diverted because of GPS problems.
LONDON — Ruptures of undersea cables that have rattled European security officials in recent months were likely the result of maritime accidents rather than Russian sabotage, according to several U.S. and European intelligence officials.