Key Points

The UN Security Council convened urgently to address Estonia's claim that Russian fighter jets intruded on its airspace. Russia firmly denied the allegation, stating its flight was routine and compliant with international rules. The United States reaffirmed its commitment to defending NATO territory, of which Estonia is a member. Other council members, including China, urged for calm and dialogue to prevent a dangerous escalation of tensions.

Key Points: UN Security Council Meets on Russian Jets in Estonian Airspace

  • Estonia alleges three Russian MiG-31s flew 10 km inside its airspace for 12 minutes
  • Russia denies the violation, stating its flight followed international rules
  • US envoy warns America and allies will defend every inch of NATO territory
  • China and other non-European council members call for restraint and de-escalation
3 min read

UN Security Council meets urgently on alleged Russian intrusion of Estonian airspace

The UN Security Council holds an emergency meeting after Estonia accuses Russian fighter jets of airspace violation, with Moscow denying the claims and tensions rising.

"The world simply cannot afford such danger to spiral out of control - Miroslav Jenca, UN Assistant Secretary-General"

United Nations, Sep 23

The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting to discuss the alleged intrusion of Estonian airspace by Russian fighter jets.

UN Assistant Secretary-General for Europe, Central Asia and the Americas Miroslav Jenca, in his briefing, said the world body is not in a position to confirm any of the claims regarding the incident and does not have any further details of the events. He, therefore, based his briefing solely on information available from public sources.

In a letter dated Saturday and addressed to the president of the Security Council, Estonia claimed that three Russian MiG-31 fighters entered up to 10 km inside Estonia's airspace and stayed for 12 minutes on Friday, said Jenca.

The Russian Defense Ministry claimed Saturday that its fighter jets made a scheduled flight from Karelia on the border with Finland to an airfield in Kaliningrad, in strict accordance with international airspace rules, without deviating from the agreed flight path and without violating Estonian airspace, said Jenca.

"We again urge all concerned to act responsibly, to use all available channels and to take immediate steps to de-escalate tensions and prevent further risks to regional security," he said. "The world simply cannot afford such danger to spiral out of control, and for the devastating war in Ukraine to further escalate and expand."

Estonia, other European countries that participated in Monday's meeting, and the United States accused Russia of violating Estonia's airspace and of escalating tension, Xinhua news agency reported.

Russia's first deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, Dmitry Polyanskiy, denied that Russian jets had violated Estonian airspace and accused European states of Russophobia.

"Through their (European politicians') efforts, a medieval-like hatred for our country, coupled with the aspiration to portray Russia as the principal threat to pan-Europe security, is, before our very eyes, becoming the overarching ideology of European states," he said.

"Our neighbors have now conceived that Russia is at fault for an incursion into Estonia's airspace. As always, there is no evidence, except for the Russophobic hysteria coming from Tallinn," said Polyanskiy.

US Permanent Representative to the United Nations Mike Waltz, in his maiden speech to the Security Council, said his country and its allies will "defend every inch of NATO territory."

Estonia is a NATO member.

Non-European members of the Security Council called for restraint and de-escalation.

Geng Shuang, China's deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, said China urges the parties concerned to remain calm and exercise restraint, clarify facts and dispel doubts through dialogue and communication, avoid misunderstanding and misjudgment, and prevent the situation from expanding or escalating.

The meeting was requested by Estonia. The council's five European members -- Britain, Denmark, France, Greece and Slovenia -- supported the request.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Interesting that UN itself says it cannot confirm the incident. Both sides making claims without solid evidence. India should maintain its balanced position and push for dialogue rather than taking sides.
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Aditya G
Russia's denial seems consistent with their previous statements. But 12 minutes inside airspace? That's quite specific. Hope both sides share radar data transparently. The world doesn't need another conflict escalation.
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Sarah B
Living in India, I see how global tensions affect our economy too. Oil prices, trade routes - everything gets impacted. Hope cooler heads prevail at UN. China's call for restraint makes sense in this situation.
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Karthik V
The Russophobia accusation is interesting. While we should criticize actions, labeling entire nations as phobic isn't helpful. India has maintained good relations with both Russia and West - perhaps we can mediate? 🤔
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Michael C
NATO's "defend every inch" statement is reassuring for small countries. But as an expat in India, I worry this could spiral. The UN meeting was necessary but real solutions need bilateral talks, not just public posturing.
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Neha E
Respectfully, I think the article could have included more technical details about how airspace violations are verified. Without that, it's just "he said, she said." Better journalism would help readers understand

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