Belarus accuses Lithuania of "provocation" after drone crash
Belarus on Wednesday accused Lithuania of a "provocation" after a drone allegedly originating from Lithuania crashed on Belarusian territory. Minsk says the device fell in the western city of Grodno and that the drone's flight path indicated it had come from Lithuania.
Belarusian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ruslan Varankov said the Lithuanian chargé d'affaires in Minsk, Erikas Vilkanekas, was summoned to the foreign ministry. According to a Minsk statement, "A strong protest was submitted to Vilnius regarding the violation of Belarus borders by a drone that originated from Lithuania on 30 November 2025."
Minsk reported that analysis of the drone's videos and navigation data showed a route that included flights over Belarus and Poland before returning to Lithuania. Varankov characterized the incident as a deliberate provocation not only against Belarus but also against Poland, and demanded explanations from Vilnius.
Relations between Lithuania and its close Russian ally Belarus have been tense in recent weeks. Lithuania, an EU and NATO member, reopened its border with Belarus in late November after having closed it a month earlier following incidents in which balloons used for cigarette smuggling entered Lithuanian airspace from Belarusian territory. Vilnius and the European Union described those balloon incidents as "hybrid threats."
In late October, Belarus closed border checkpoints, a move that prompted the seizure by Minsk of about 2,000 Lithuanian trucks that had become trapped in Belarus. Meanwhile, the European Union has been working to bolster defenses on its eastern flank amid a rise in unmanned aerial incursions that Brussels regards as destabilizing actions linked to Moscow.






