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Trump admin accuses Hamas of backing Gaza flotilla, sanctions activist and Muslim Brotherhood networks

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The Trump administration on Tuesday accused Hamas of using activist and Muslim Brotherhood-linked networks to support a Gaza-bound flotilla and sanctioned several organizers tied to the effort.
The sanctions package, announced by the Treasury and State departments, also targeted activists associated with Samidoun, an anti-Israel activist network that U.S. officials describe as a front for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), along with operatives tied to Muslim Brotherhood networks aligned with Hamas.
The U.S. has designated the PFLP as a foreign terrorist organization. And governments including the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have designated the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization. Both groups are Islamist organizations that believe in establishing Islamic theocracies where sharia, or Islamic law, is the law of the land.
The sanctions came after the Israeli navy stopped dozens of boats from the flotilla in international waters off Cyprus and detained hundreds of activists on board. Activists involved in the flotilla say the mission is intended to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza and challenge Israel’s blockade of the territory, while Israeli officials have described the effort as a political provocation.
The move lands as a warning shot at a broader activist ecosystem in the U.S. that has long championed the flotilla campaign in a nexus between Islamist and pro-communist organizations, including CodePink and the People’s Forum, nonprofits funded by an American Marxist expatriate, Neville Roy Singham, living in Shanghai, promoting the agenda of the Chinese Communist Party. On Monday, CodePink co-founder Medea Benjamin published a video, protesting the «kidnapping» of flotilla members detained by Israel, calling the country a «pariah state.» Earlier this month, the People’s Forum demanded the release of other detained activists. The sanctions fit a wider Treasury Department strategy of targeting networks that use humanitarian or civil-society branding to amplify causes aligned with Hamas.
ISRAEL CLAIMS NO AID WAS FOUND ABOARD GAZA-BOUND FLOTILLA
People hold banners and Palestinian flags during a protest against Israel’s interception of the Global Sumud flotilla outside the Foreign Ministry in Athens, Greece, on May 18, 2026. (Costas Baltas/Anadolu via Getty Images)
«The pro-terror flotilla attempting to reach Gaza is a ludicrous attempt to undermine President Trump’s successful progress toward lasting peace in the region,» Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said. «Treasury will continue to sever Hamas’ global financial support networks, no matter where in the world they are,» Bessent said.
The move reflects growing scrutiny from U.S. officials over the role activist, nonprofit and international support networks play in amplifying or supporting groups designated as terrorist organizations.
The sanctions freeze any U.S.-based assets of designated individuals and generally prohibit Americans and U.S.-based entities from conducting business with them.
The State Department said the designations target three categories of what it described as Hamas enablers: organizers of a Hamas-backed flotilla attempting to reach Gaza, operatives within Hamas-aligned Muslim Brotherhood networks that facilitate violent terrorist attacks and coordinators tied to Samidoun.
Among those sanctioned were Spain-based Saif Hashim Kamel Abukishek, a member of the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad who Treasury officials said served on the flotilla’s steering committee, and Jordan-based Hisham Abdallah Sulayman Abu Mahfuz, the acting secretary general and president of the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad.
Treasury also sanctioned Belgium-based Samidoun coordinator Mohammed Khatib and Madrid-based activist Jaldia Abubakra Aueda, whom officials accused of helping coordinate the group’s activities in Europe.
TURKEY’S NATO ROLE UNDER SCRUTINY AMID NEW REPORT ON HAMAS, MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD TIES

Israeli forces board a vessel during the interception of the Global Sumud flotilla in the Mediterranean Sea on May 19, 2026. (Global Sumud Flotilla via AP)
Treasury has previously described Samidoun as a fundraising and support platform for the PFLP in countries where the group faces legal restrictions.
The sanctions package also targeted several operatives tied to Hamas-aligned Muslim Brotherhood networks, including members linked to Harakat Sawa’d Misr, an Egypt-based militant offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood known by the acronym HASM.
«Hamas uses these enablers to sustain its position in Gaza, finance its operations, and engage in terrorist violence beyond its borders,» the State Department said. «Today’s action exposes how Hamas exploits diaspora organizations, religious institutions, and purported civil society groups to advance its malign agenda while claiming humanitarian objectives.»
Treasury accused Karim Sayed Ahmed Moghny, one of the individuals sanctioned Tuesday, of directing militant activity, training operatives in covert operations and collaborating with HASM on attacks targeting Israeli interests.
Treasury also sanctioned Marwan Abu Ras and the Palestinian Scholars Association, which officials accused of helping align religious institutions in Gaza with Hamas’ ideology.
The sanctions came as Israeli forces intercepted the remaining flotilla vessels Tuesday, detaining hundreds of activists aboard the boats, according to The Associated Press.

Cutline/caption: Israeli soldiers are seen on a vessel bearing symbols of the Global Sumud flotilla, with a cargo ship behind it, as seen from Ashdod, southern Israel, on May 19, 2026. (Amir Cohen/Reuters)
Flotilla organizers said 428 activists from more than 40 countries were detained after Israeli forces stopped roughly 41 vessels in international waters off Cyprus, according to the AP.
Amnesty International called for the release of flotilla activists, including Abukishek, and described the mission as a «peaceful solidarity mission» intended to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza.
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Turkey and Hamas condemned Israel’s interception of the flotilla, while Ireland’s prime minister described the operation in international waters as «absolutely unacceptable,» according to the AP.
Samidoun told Fox News Digital it rejected the sanctions and denied having «material or organizational ties» to groups designated as terrorist organizations. The group also accused the U.S. government of politically coordinating the sanctions with Israel’s interception of the flotilla, which it described as «piracy» and the «abduction» of activists.
Fox News Digital was unable to immediately reach representatives for Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad through publicly available channels.
terrorism, israel, sanctions, state department, hamas, middle east, scott bessent, fund raising
INTERNACIONAL
Who is Turkey’s Erdoğan? How NATO’s most unpredictable leader keeps reinventing himself

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As President Donald Trump heads to Ankara, Turkey, for the upcoming NATO summit, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is again at the center of alliance politics.
Trump has praised Erdoğan as «a friend» and «a respected leader,» underscoring a relationship that could shape defense talks between Washington and Turkey, including Turkey’s long-running effort to restore deeper military cooperation.
The moment highlights the remarkable position Erdoğan occupies today: Once regarded as one of NATO’s most troublesome allies after taking delivery of the Russian S-400 missile defense system in 2019, Turkey has become increasingly difficult for the alliance to sideline as the war in Ukraine drags on, instability grips the Middle East and the Black Sea grows more strategic.
For many, however, Erdoğan remains an enigma. Rather than being driven by a fixed worldview, experts argue, Erdoğan repeatedly has reinvented himself politically, adopting whichever ideology best serves his overriding objective: remaining in power.
TURKEY DETAINS OVER 200 SUSPECTS, INCLUDING ALLEGED ISIS MILITANTS, IN SWEEPING RAID AHEAD OF NATO SUMMIT
As President Donald Trump heads to Ankara, Turkey, for the upcoming NATO summit, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is again at the center of alliance politics. (Pierre Crom/Getty Images)
Erdoğan has ruled Turkey for more than two decades, evolving from an Istanbul mayor with Islamist roots into a pro-European reformer, then a nationalist strongman, and now a pivotal NATO power broker courted by Trump.
To supporters, he restored Turkey’s global stature. To critics, he hollowed out its democracy while jailing rivals, journalists and activists. But Erdoğan’s most defining trait, experts say, may be less ideology than survival.
Is he an Islamist? A nationalist? A Western ally? A Russian partner? An authoritarian?
Perhaps the most important thing to understand about Erdoğan is that he has been all of those things — at different moments, according to Gönül Tol, founding director of the Middle East Institute’s Turkey Program and author of «Erdoğan’s War: A Strongman’s Struggle at Home and in Syria.»
«He’s not an ideological man,» Tol told Fox News Digital. «He’s very pragmatic, first and foremost a populist.»
SIX KURDISH FIGHTERS KILLED IN IRGC AMBUSH AS CLASHES SPREAD ACROSS WESTERN IRAN

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan remains an enigma for many. (AP)
The Conservative Democrat
Erdoğan’s roots lie in Turkey’s Islamist political movement. Educated at an Imam Hatip religious school, he entered politics through National Outlook, a right-wing Islamist movement founded by Necmettin Erbakan, and eventually became mayor of Istanbul as a member of Erbakan’s Welfare Party.
But after founding the AKP, or Justice and Development Party, in 2001, Erdoğan abandoned the Islamist label, presenting himself instead as a «conservative democrat» committed to economic reform and closer ties with Europe — a shift that experts say marked the first of several political reinventions.
When Erdoğan and his Justice and Development Party first swept to power in 2002, Turkey was seeking membership in the European Union, military influence over politics was shrinking, and Erdoğan promised democratic reforms, economic modernization and closer ties with the West.
Many liberals and centrists initially supported him.
«He often said, ‘I’m not an Islamist anymore. I’m a conservative democrat,’» Tol said. «And that brand really served him well.»
Those early years transformed both Turkey’s economy and Erdoğan’s popularity.
TRUMP BETS ON FORMER NATO TROUBLEMAKER AS TURKEY’S STRATEGIC VALUE SURGES

Many liberals and centrists initially supported Turkish President Tayyip Erdoğan. (Dilara Senkaya/Reuters)
The Islamist
After consolidating power, Erdoğan began another political transformation.
Following the Arab Spring in 2011, he increasingly portrayed himself as a champion of political Islam, backing Islamist movements across the Middle East while presenting himself domestically as the defender of Turkey’s conservative religious majority.
«He wanted to inject more Islam into public life, into education,» Tol said. «He was using this more Islamist narrative… the goal was always to acquire more power.»
That anti-Western turn went beyond rhetoric.
In 2016, Erdoğan accused the U.S.-led coalition of supporting terrorist groups in Syria, including ISIS and Kurdish militias that Turkey considers terrorist organizations— an allegation the State Department dismissed as «ludicrous,» according to Reuters.
His increasingly vocal support for Hamas and sharp criticism of Israel became defining features of his foreign policy.
«The perpetrators of the massacre and the destruction taking place in Gaza are those providing unlimited support for Israel,» Erdoğan said in 2023, adding that Israel’s attacks and those backing them amounted to «murder and mental illness,» according to Reuters.
Tol cautions against viewing those positions alone as evidence that Erdoğan remains primarily motivated by Islamism.
«Anti-Israel sentiment cuts across ideological lines in Turkey,» she said, arguing that Erdoğan’s foreign policy has consistently reflected political calculation more than religious doctrine.
TRUMP’S TURKEY ARMS SALE PROPOSAL SPARKS CONGRESSIONAL QUESTIONS BEFORE NATO SUMMIT

Protesters carry a banner with pictures of the slain Hamas leaders Ismail Haniyeh and Yahya Sinwar. (Murat Kocabas/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
The nationalist strongman
As Turkey’s economy slowed and regional ambitions faltered, Erdoğan pivoted once again.
He embraced Turkish nationalism, built alliances with hardline nationalist parties and cultivated the image of an indispensable strongman capable of restoring Turkey’s historical influence.
Supporters credit him with transforming Turkey into a regional power.
«He does have genuine support,» Tol said, estimating his support at roughly 35%.
Some supporters depend on government assistance and patronage networks built under his rule. Others believe Erdoğan restored dignity to conservative religious Turks who long felt marginalized by the country’s secular establishment.
Still others view his increasingly assertive foreign policy as proof Turkey has reclaimed its place on the world stage.
«They think, ‘We have become a world-class nation,’» Tol said. «‘Everyone is praising our president. Turkey is a big player.’»
While Erdoğan continues to command a loyal political base, critics say the price has been Turkey’s democratic institutions.
Authorities increasingly have used courts and criminal investigations to sideline political opponents, including Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu, whose arrest earlier in 2026 triggered nationwide demonstrations, according to Human Rights Watch.
The organization says the government has intensified efforts to weaken Turkey’s main opposition party despite its strong performance in the 2024 municipal elections.
TRUMP’S PERSONAL FEUDS WITH ALLIES FROM ITALY TO ISRAEL REVEAL HOW PERSONALITY DRIVES HIS FOREIGN POLICY

President Donald Trump greets Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during a summit to support ending the war in Gaza, Oct. 13, 2025, in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt. (Evan Vucci AP Photo/ Pool)
The NATO dealmaker
Today, Erdoğan finds himself in another political transformation.
After years of anti-Western rhetoric and disputes with Washington, Turkey has worked to repair relations with the United States and Europe.
That rhetoric was once central to Erdoğan’s posture.
He accused the U.S.-led coalition in Syria of supporting terrorist groups, blasted Washington’s sanctions over Turkey’s purchase of the Russian S-400 missile defense system, calling them a «hostile attack» on Turkey’s sovereign rights and defense industry, and repeatedly accused Western governments of enabling Israel’s war in Gaza.
The shift comes as Turkey’s strategic importance has grown dramatically.
The S-400 purchase remains at the center of one of the biggest unresolved disputes between Washington and Ankara. After Turkey took delivery of the Russian system in 2019, the U.S. expelled Turkey from the F-35 fighter jet program and later imposed sanctions on Turkey’s defense procurement agency.
Former U.S. Ambassador to Turkey James Jeffrey recently told Fox News Digital that restoring Turkey to the F-35 program remains far more complicated than other defense deals because operating the Russian-made S-400 alongside America’s most advanced stealth fighter could expose sensitive U.S. technology.
«The F-35 is a different issue,» Jeffrey said, arguing that the problem is technical, not merely political.
Turkey controls the Bosporus and Dardanelles, fields NATO’s second-largest military and plays a critical role in the Black Sea following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Jeffrey said that Turkey has been «essential to Ukraine staying in the fight,» pointing to Turkey’s enforcement of the Montreux Convention, a 1936 treaty that gives Turkey control over naval passage through the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits, its early delivery of Bayraktar drones to Ukraine, and its role as a mediator between Kyiv and Moscow.
«You can’t contain Russia in the Black Sea without Turkey,» Jeffrey said.
For Tol, however, Erdoğan’s latest embrace of NATO is simply another example of his political flexibility.
«There was a time when he was very anti-Western, very critical of NATO, very critical of the United States,» she said.
«And now look at him.»

People chant slogans as they protest the arrest of Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu in Istanbul, Turkey, March 19, 2025. (Francisco Seco/The Associated Press )
Growing criticism
Human Rights Watch argues Erdoğan has used Turkey’s growing importance to NATO as political cover while expanding pressure on journalists, activists and opposition figures.
Freedom House says Erdoğan has become «increasingly authoritarian» over the past decade, consolidating power through constitutional changes and the imprisonment of political opponents, independent journalists and civil society figures.
Turkey’s prisons held more than 420,000 inmates — far exceeding their official capacity of roughly 304,000, according to a June 2026 report citing Turkish Justice Ministry figures.
NATO allies have grown quieter on Turkey’s rights record as Ankara’s strategic value has risen, Reuters reported ahead of the summit, with former U.S. Ambassador David Satterfield saying it remains important for the West to speak publicly about the «degradation of democratic institutions in Turkey.»
Tol believes Erdoğan’s domestic agenda can be understood through a single principle.
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People take part in a demonstration against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Sweden’s NATO bid arranged by The Kurdish Democratic Society Center in Sweden, in Stockholm, Jan. 21. 2023. (Christine Olsson/TT via AP)
«Everything is designed to keep him in power,» she said. «Beyond that, I don’t see a binding ideology that brings together all his policies.»
As Trump heads to Turkey, that may be the key to understanding one of NATO’s most consequential — and unpredictable — leaders.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Turkish government for comment.
Fox News Digital’s Morgan Phillips and Reuters contributed to this report.
turkey, nato, donald trump
INTERNACIONAL
Guatemala: Sala deja sin efecto órdenes de captura en contra del exjefe la CICIG y otros fiscales anticorrupción

La Sala Tercera de Apelaciones del Ramo Penal ordenó dejar sin efecto las órdenes de captura giradas en contra de exfiscales del Ministerio Público (MP) dirigido por Thelma Aldana, así como de la extinta Comisión Internacional contra la Impunidad (CICIG).
Las órdenes de aprehensión fueron solicitadas durante la administración de Consuelo Porras, en el MP. En su momento el exjefe de la Fiscalía Especial contra la Impunidad (FECI), Rafael Curruchiche, argumentó supuestos acuerdos fraudulentos, eliminación de archivos y supuestas negociaciones corruptas relacionados con el caso Odebrecht.
Las medidas de coerción ya habían sido revocadas desde abril por la Cámara de Amparo y Antejuicio de la Corte Suprema de Justicia, sin embargo, fue hasta este 1 de julio cuando la Sala Tercera Apelaciones ordenó el cumplimiento de la resolución.
“En virtud, de lo ordenado por la Cámara de Amparo y Antejuicio de la Corte Suprema de Justicia, en resolución de fecha nueve de abril de dos mil veintiséis, esta Sala procede a resolver en el sentido que se deja sin efecto la resolución de fecha treinta de mayo de dos mil veinticinco dictada por esta Sala, en la que tal como se argumenta en los párrafos que anteceden se ordenó decretarse la rebeldía y en consecuencia se dictó órdenes de aprehensión”, detalla la resolución a la que Infobae tuvo acceso.

Esta resolución deja sin efecto las órdenes de aprehensión giradas en contra del excomisionado colombiano de la CICIG, Iván Velásquez, actual embajador de su país en el Vaticano; así como las impulsadas contra Luz Adriana Camargo, actual fiscal general de Colombia.
En el caso de Velásquez, la Cámara recordó que “el Comisionado de la CICIG gozaba de inmunidad”, siempre que sus acciones estuvieran dentro de las funciones para las cuales fue designado, precepto que no se violó durante su ejercicio en Guatemala.

También se cancelan las órdenes de captura de la exfiscal general guatemalteca Thelma Aldana; de la exsecretaria del MP, Mayra Veliz Pérez; del exjefe de la FECI, Juan Francisco Sandoval; y de exmandatarios de la CICIG como Luis David Gaitán Arana, así como de otros fiscales que laboraban en la fiscalía contra la impunidad.
La resolución favorece a directivos de la empresa Odebrecht y a los empresarios guatemaltecos David Fernando Font Verdugo, Jorge Luis Font Verdugo, Álvaro Stein Barillas y Juan Pablo Carrasco de Groote, expresidente de la Cámara de Comercio Guatemalteco-Americana (AmChamn), luego de que la Cámara afirmara que la Sala se “extralimitó en el uso de sus facultades legales al emitir órdenes de captura sin tener competencia legal”.
Luego de conocer la revocatoria, Juan Francisco Sandoval, quien se encuentra en el exilio, dijo a Infobae: “Esta resolución confirma lo que hemos sostenido desde el inicio: las órdenes de aprehensión fueron emitidas por un órgano que carecía de competencia para hacerlo. La propia Cámara de Amparo estableció que la Sala Tercera se extralimitó en sus funciones… ahora se dejan sin efecto esas órdenes y se restituyen nuestros derechos”.

Agregó: “Esperamos que este sea un paso hacia el restablecimiento del Estado de derecho y el respeto irrestricto al debido proceso, frente a la utilización arbitraria del sistema penal para perseguir a quienes combatimos la corrupción”.
Este caso surgió por los acuerdos de colaboración eficaz del caso Odebrecht que se gestionaron por Velásquez y Camargo en 2017. La FECI, dirigida por Rafael Curruchiche, sostiene que esos acuerdos permitieron impunidad a exdirectivos de Odebrecht.
En su momento, Curruchiche afirmó que sus investigaciones revelaron un supuesto patrón sistemático de actuación ilegal por parte de exfuncionarios de la CICIG, de la FECI y de exautoridades del MP, afirmando que se habían convertido en actores clave de un esquema perverso de extorsión, encubrimiento y manipulación judicial”.
“Estos exfuncionarios archivaron, eliminaron o incluso negociaron expedientes vinculados a figuras clave del caso Odebrecht. No lo hicieron por falta de pruebas, sino como parte de negociaciones ilícitas en las que exigían dinero o favores políticos a cambio de impunidad”, afirmó el exjefe de la FECI, quien recientemente dejó el MP, pero que aún se mantiene en listas de actores corruptos y antidemocráticos de países como Estados Unidos, la Unión Europea, Canadá y el Reino Unido.

Mientras que especialistas en derecho penal han criticado las resoluciones de la Sala Tercera de Apelaciones, por considerar que existen irregularidades en sus resoluciones y que muchas de estas estaban alineadas a los intereses del gobiernos vinculados con la corrupción y la impunidad.
La CICIG marcó un antes y un después en la historia judicial de América Latina. Concebida originalmente en 2006 para desmantelar los Cuerpos Ilegales de Seguridad y Aparatos Clandestinos de Seguridad (CIACS), la Comisión mutó bajo el liderazgo de sus distintos comisionados hacia un combate frontal contra la gran corrupción, la captura del Estado guatemalteco y el financiamiento electoral ilícito.
Durante sus 12 años de mandato (2007–2019), el experimento respaldado por Naciones Unidas demostró que era posible procesar judicialmente a las élites tradicionalmente intocables. Sin embargo, su agresividad procesal provocó una feroz contraofensiva política que terminó por asfixiarla.
Uno de los comisionados emblemáticos fue Iván Velásquez, quien lideró investigaciones que llevaron a la condena de 16 años de prisión contra el expresidente Otto Pérez Molina y la exvicepresidenta Roxana Baldetti por su participación en la estructura criminal conocida como La Línea.
guatemala,cicig,órdenes de captura,corrupción
INTERNACIONAL
Report warns Russia using shadow fleet to probe NATO drone defenses

Russia’s shadow fleet launches drone campaign across Europe
Jennifer Griffin reports on Russia’s shadow fleet launching a drone campaign across Europe to surveil military sites and test NATO’s air defenses. The International Institute for Strategic Studies report reveals 144 suspected drones near sensitive sites in Germany, France, and the UK.
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As NATO allies prepare to meet in Turkey, at the top of their agenda will be drone warfare and Russia’s testing of the NATO alliance.
Using its shadow fleet of old sanction-busting ships, Russia appears to have launched drones at European military bases and airports to test the reaction time of NATO allies and their air defenses, according to a new report published by the International Institute of Strategic Studies, or IISS.
Between August 2024 and February 2026, 144 suspected drones were recorded near sensitive military and nuclear sites in Germany, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, the UK, and Denmark, and over American air bases in the UK in November 2024.
UKRAINE’S BATTLEFIELD IS TRANSFORMING THE FUTURE OF NATO
French navy diverts suspected russian shadow fleet tanker to Marseille-Fos port. (Manon Cruz/Reuters)
«There’s no doubt in my mind that the Russians are using the shadow fleet vessels as a platform to get different types of drones in closer to various European countries,» said Ret. Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, who served as the commanding general of US Army Europe until 2018.
In Germany there were more than 1,000 suspicious drone sightings in 2025, over German defense companies and military bases where Ukrainian soldiers were training in Germany.
«Whoever is doing it is testing the reaction of the authorities, is testing how the public will respond, will they panic, will they blame their politicians and the authorities,» asked Elisabeth Braw of the Atlantic Council. «Also they are testing perhaps to see how we as European countries or how European countries might react in a real crisis there.»
This spate of unmanned aerial vehicles occurred in air space over a dozen NATO states and Ireland, the report states, «forcing repeated closures of major commercial aviation hubs, disrupting military operations and penetrating the perimeters of some of Europe’s most sensitive defence installations.»
In 2025 mystery drones targeted military bases in the Netherlands and Belgium where the US is thought to base its B61-12 nuclear gravity bombs and France’s ballistic-missile submarine base at Île Longue.
«It’s a combination of espionage,» Hodges said. «But also psychologically to create a lot of anxiety in populations to scare them so that they would put pressure on their governments not to support Ukraine.»
RUSSIAN GENERALS’ ASSASSINATIONS EXPOSE GROWING RIFT INSIDE PUTIN’S SECURITY APPARATUS

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks at a press conference after meetings with the heads of the EU and Ireland, following a formal ceremony to mark the launch of Ireland’s eighth EU presidency, at Dublin Castle in Dublin on July 1, 2026. (Paul Faith / AFP via Getty Images)
The Russian drone campaign appears designed to probe the response times and decision-making thresholds of allied air defense and civil-military command structures.
It also seeks to identify vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure, including dual-use civilian facilities, military logistics hubs supporting Ukraine, and sites associated with the Alliance’s nuclear deterrence.
Additionally, the campaign aims to impose economic and psychological costs on European societies by disrupting civilian aviation, undermining public confidence in airspace security, and fostering distrust and panic. Finally, it appears intended to normalize low-level airspace violations that remain below the threshold likely to trigger a direct Allied military response.
Those sightings peaked in late 2025, and forced the temporary closure of several European airports, including in Germany, Spain and Denmark.
Sweden is the only European country to accuse Moscow directly after a drone launched at sea from a Russian spy ship flew near a French aircraft carrier.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has denied accusations of Russian sabotage and surveillance across Europe.
«What’s the point of all this,» Putin asked of reporters recently. «Name even one proven fact.»
AMERICA’S POWER GRID, FOOD SUPPLY AND MORE ARE UNDER THREAT FROM DRONES

Russian President Vladimir Putin has denied accusations of Russian sabotage and surveillance across Europe. (Vyacheslav PROKOFYEV / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)
But IISS tracked the locations of Russia’s shadow fleet of ships used to evade sanctions and linked them to recent high-profile drone incidents, concluding that Russia could use the ships as a platform to launch the drones while creating deniability. Drones often don’t trigger radar.
On Jan. 3, 2025, a Russian shadow fleet vessel, the Arctica, sailed along the Danish coast, while 20 drones flew over the port of Koege, Denmark, before disappearing at sea.
On Sept. 22, drone sightings led to the closure of Copenhagen Airport. The IISS found several shadow ships were in the area at the time, including the Arctica and the Boracay.
And its not just in Europe. Dozens of unexplained drone sightings also have taken place in the U.S . in the past several years.
In December 2023 at Virginia’s Joint Base Langley-Eustis unauthorized aircraft appeared in the skies above the base for 17 days straight, evading military tracking and forcing the Pentagon to bring in specialized assets — including a NASA WB-57 high-altitude jet — to investigate.
In March drones flew near Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana, home of the B- 52 H Stratofortress bomber, where drones came in a pattern to suggest they were attempting to avoid the operator or operators being located. Lights on the drones suggested the operators may be testing security responses at the base.
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Panicked sightings of drones near critical infrastructure along the East Coast of the United States in late 2024 led to the Trump administration ordering the declassification of these investigations shortly after the inauguration to ease public concern, concluding the drones were mostly those of hobbyists and that there was no evidence of a foreign threat related to the majority of reported sightings.
The IISS says these are no hobbyists threatening NATO allies in Europe, with the most likely culprit launching the drones from shadow vessels at sea.
nato, politics, drones, russia, europe
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