Britain is sending equipment and personnel to Belgium after a spate of drone sightings near airports, the head of the UK military said Sunday.
In the past week both Belgium's main international airport at Brussels and Liege, one of Europe's biggest cargo airports, were forced to close temporarily because of drone incursions. That came after a series of unidentified drone flights near a military base where US nuclear weapons are stored.
Air Chief Marshal Richard Knighton, the head of Britain's armed forces, said the UK had agreed to "deploy our people, our equipment to Belgium to help them," after a request from Belgian authorities.
"We don't know - and the Belgians don't yet know - the source of those drones, but we will help them by providing our kit and capability, which has already started to deploy to help Belgium," Knighton told the BBC.
In recent months, drone incidents across Europe have forced airports to suspend flights at a time. Russia has been blamed in some cases, but Belgium has not said who has been operating the drones.
Belgian Defence Minister Theo Francken said he believed that some incidents were part of "a spying operation" that could not have been done by amateurs.
Belgium is home to the headquarters of NATO and the European Union, as well as Europe's biggest financial clearinghouse holding tens of billions of euros in frozen Russian assets. Many EU countries want to use those assets as collateral to provide loans to Ukraine, but Belgium has so far resisted.
In the past week both Belgium's main international airport at Brussels and Liege, one of Europe's biggest cargo airports, were forced to close temporarily because of drone incursions. That came after a series of unidentified drone flights near a military base where US nuclear weapons are stored.
Air Chief Marshal Richard Knighton, the head of Britain's armed forces, said the UK had agreed to "deploy our people, our equipment to Belgium to help them," after a request from Belgian authorities.
"We don't know - and the Belgians don't yet know - the source of those drones, but we will help them by providing our kit and capability, which has already started to deploy to help Belgium," Knighton told the BBC.
In recent months, drone incidents across Europe have forced airports to suspend flights at a time. Russia has been blamed in some cases, but Belgium has not said who has been operating the drones.
Belgian Defence Minister Theo Francken said he believed that some incidents were part of "a spying operation" that could not have been done by amateurs.
Belgium is home to the headquarters of NATO and the European Union, as well as Europe's biggest financial clearinghouse holding tens of billions of euros in frozen Russian assets. Many EU countries want to use those assets as collateral to provide loans to Ukraine, but Belgium has so far resisted.
You may also like

'Exposing corrupt journalists': Donald Trump reacts to BBC boss Tim Davie stepping down over Jan 6 speech row

Lewis Hamilton in sincere Ferrari apology at Brazilian GP as Brit 'living a nightmare'

Say what you want about Meghan Markle but there is one thing she can't be criticised for

ITV This Morning star 'set for I'm A Celebrity return' 15 years after jungle stint

Is Stephen Curry playing tonight vs the Indiana Pacers? Latest update on the Golden State Warriors star's injury report (November 9, 2025)





