Germany has offered Warsaw the Patriot missile defense system to help it secure its airspace after a stray missile crashed and killed two people in Poland last week.
“We have offered Poland support in securing airspace – with our Eurofighters and with Patriot air defense systems,” Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht told a newspaper on Sunday.
Ground-based air defense systems such as Raytheon’s Patriot are built to intercept incoming missiles. The Berlin government had already said it would offer its neighbor further help in air policing with German Eurofighters after the incident.
Russia’s Defense Ministry categorically rejected Poland’s preliminary claim of a Russian missile striking the Polish territory, slamming the allegation as “deliberate provocation aimed at escalating the situation.” Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said following the incident that the Western narrative was aimed at “a deliberate provocation aimed at escalating the situation.”
Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy chair of Russia’s Security Council, recently warned the missile explosion in Poland has pushed the West closer to World War III.
Russia’s deputy representative to the UN, Dmitry Polyansky, also said there was “an obvious attempt to provoke a direct military confrontation between NATO and Russia, with all the ensuing consequences for the whole world.”
The missile landed outside the rural Polish village of Przewodow on November 15, nearly 6.4 kilometers west of the Ukrainian border. The circumstances surrounding the incident – marking the first time a member of the US-led NATO military alliance comes under a direct missile hit during the nearly 9-month war – remains unclear. NATO said there was no sign Russia was preparing an attack against the military alliance in the troubled region