Zelenskyy says 3,500 drones launched at Ukraine this month as he calls for Trump to take ‘clear position’ on Russia — Europe live

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More than 3,500 drones launched at Ukraine this month, Zelenskyy says

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy said that Russia has launched more than 3,500 drones and nearly 190 missiles against Ukraine so far this month.

“There have also been provocations against our partners,” he said on X, refering to recent Russian drone incursions into Poland and Romania.

“This is precisely the kind of aerial terror against which Ukraine is calling for joint defence – so that no one has to scramble combat aircraft in haste and feel Russia’s pressure on their borders.”

He added:

“Now is the time to implement the joint protection of our European skies with a multi-layered air defense system.

All the technologies for this are already in place. What is needed are investments and determination – strong action.”

Zelenskyy also offered an update on overnight attacks on Zaporizhzhia, which he said injured 13, including two children. In the Mykolaiv region, one person was killed after a strike on what he called “an ordinary farm.”

Firefighters work at the site of buildings hit during the Russian missile strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine.
Firefighters work at the site of buildings hit during the Russian missile strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine. Photograph: State Emergency Service Of Ukraine/Reuters

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'If you've got drones putting Polish lives at risk, Nato will ... take them out,' UK defence secretary says

Dan Sabbagh

Dan Sabbagh

Defence and security editor

John Healey, the UK defence secretary, said Nato was “responding with unity and strength” to the threats and that Typhoons would be ready to attack Russian drones flying over Nato countries if required to do so.

British defence secretary John Healey is interviewed as he tours a new military drone production facility operated by Tekever in Swindon, Britain.
British defence secretary John Healey is interviewed as he tours a new military drone production facility operated by Tekever in Swindon, Britain. Photograph: Jaimi Joy/Reuters

If you’ve got drones that are putting Polish lives at risk, then Nato will take the action to take them out,” Healey said, adding the Typhoons were part of a broader mission “to defend Nato airspace”.

Over the weekend, Romania became the second Nato ally in eastern Europe to detect a Russian drone crossing into its airspace in a week – and Healey said the Typhoons mission would extend operations to the country if deemed necessary.

He said: “They are deployed as part of the Nato Eastern Sentry air policing. What Nato decides to and where it decides to deploy them will be for Nato. That’s part of our contribution to the alliance.”

There was no further update on whether the UK believed that the Russian drone incursion into Poland was deliberate.

Healey said: “There’s no firm confirmation on intent, but in the end that’s not the point. It’s still reckless, it’s still dangerous.” It was, he added, “straight out of the [Vladimir] Putin playbook”.

Back to Ukraine, the UK has announced last night that RAF Typhoon jets will be deployed within days to shoot down drones over Poland and other Nato allies in eastern Europe if necessary.

The move comes just days after last week’s incursion of 19 uncrewed Russian aircraft into Poland.

Our defence and security editor Dan Sabbagh has the details on how the operation will work.

'For Europe's survival, we must do what has not been done before,' EU's Draghi says

Summing up his speech, Draghi says that “in substance, the more reforms, and this is a point I made some times, the more we push [for] reforms, the more private capital will step up and the less public money we will need.”

Former ECB chief Mario Draghi delivers a keynote address on the progress made and the transformations that have taken place since the release of Draghi Report on EU competitiveness in 2024, in Brussels.
Former ECB chief Mario Draghi delivers a keynote address on the progress made and the transformations that have taken place since the release of Draghi Report on EU competitiveness in 2024, in Brussels. Photograph: Yves Herman/Reuters

“Of course, this path will break longstanding taboos, but the rest of the world has already broken theirs. For Europe’s survival, we must do what has not been done before, and refuse to be held back by self imposed limits,” he says.

He stresses the EU needs to “move beyond broad strategies and back-loaded timelines,” and need “concrete dates and deliverables.”

“European citizens are asking that their leaders raise their eyes from their daily concerns towards their common European destiny and grasp the scale of the challenge.

Only unity of intent and urgency of response will show that they are ready to meet extraordinary times with extraordinary action.

EU seen by companies as 'failing to match the speed of change elsewhere,' Draghi says as he urges EU to move faster on competitiveness

Well, Mario Draghi – of the Draghi report – is speaking now and he is not exactly as positive as von der Leyen.

He talks about the need for the EU to move faster, be more agile, and match the pace of change elsewhere.

He says that having his plan means that “Europe’s citizens and companies value the diagnosis, the clear priorities and the action plans, but they also express growing frustration” with the pace of change.

They are disappointed by how slowly the EU moves. They see us failing to match the speed of change elsewhere. They are ready to act, but fear governments have not grasped the gravity of the moment, he says.

He adds that “too often, excuses are made for our slowness,” with some portraying it as the EU’s strength or respect for the rule of law.

“I think that’s complacency. Competitors in US and China are far less constrained even when acting within the law. To carry on as usual is to resign ourselves to falling behind,” he warns.

A different path demands new speed, scale and intensity. It means acting together, not fragmenting our efforts. It means focusing resources where impact is greatest. It means delivering results within months, not years,” he argues.

On AI, he also strikes a more cautions tone, saying that it “depends on the orchestration of at least four other technologies” in cloud, supercomputing, cybersecurity and fibre satellites.

He says that Europe is falling behind the US and China on large foundation models, and sees lower AI adoption.

He stresses that “more ambition is needed” to “remove barriers to scaling up new technologies,” as he calls for more support from member states to move faster.

Draghi also takes about the AI Act being “another source of uncertainty,” suggesting that the next stage of codes of practice on high risk AI systems should be “paused until we better understand the drawbacks” as he called for “ex post” assessment to drive enforcement.

On industrial policies needed to respond to the rise of economic nationalism and protectionism, he says:

“States are using every tool at their disposal to advance their interests. So far, Europe’s response has fallen into two traps, uncoordinated national efforts or blind faith that market force will build new structures. The first can never deliver scale. The second is impossible when others distort markets and tilt the level playing field.”

Ouch, ouch, ouch.

EU's von der Leyen praises bloc's progress on competitiveness

As I mentioned earlier, the EU’s von der Leyen is speaking now in Brussels on “one year after the Draghi report.”

Painting a rather rosy picture, she argues that Europe “is not only a challenger, but a leader in many fields that will define that race” on innovation, including computing power and AI adoption.

She insists that Europe “is not playing catch up” like it was during the rise of the Internet, but is “among the frontrunners.”

But on a slightly more critical tone, she says that Europe “needs to capitalise on our strengths” as she pointed out that the bloc’s “single market is far from being completed” and this needs to change to help companies grow.

“It should not be easier to find a fortune across an ocean than across a European border, and we have started to address these barriers,” she says, stressing plans to progress reforms by 2028.

She also talks about the progress on cleaner energy, even as she admits that “our energy prices remain still far too high, too volatile, too disparate across Europe” with more to be done on interconnectors and grids across the continent.

Von der Leyen also talks about the need to reduce Europe’s dependencies, particularly on China. “With the right policies, we can shore up our security,” she says.

I’ll keep monitoring her speech for key lines.

More than 3,500 drones launched at Ukraine this month, Zelenskyy says

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy said that Russia has launched more than 3,500 drones and nearly 190 missiles against Ukraine so far this month.

“There have also been provocations against our partners,” he said on X, refering to recent Russian drone incursions into Poland and Romania.

“This is precisely the kind of aerial terror against which Ukraine is calling for joint defence – so that no one has to scramble combat aircraft in haste and feel Russia’s pressure on their borders.”

He added:

“Now is the time to implement the joint protection of our European skies with a multi-layered air defense system.

All the technologies for this are already in place. What is needed are investments and determination – strong action.”

Zelenskyy also offered an update on overnight attacks on Zaporizhzhia, which he said injured 13, including two children. In the Mykolaiv region, one person was killed after a strike on what he called “an ordinary farm.”

Firefighters work at the site of buildings hit during the Russian missile strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine.
Firefighters work at the site of buildings hit during the Russian missile strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine. Photograph: State Emergency Service Of Ukraine/Reuters

Morning opening: Welcome back to Europe, Mr Trump

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has called for US president Donald Trump to take “a clear position” on Russia, including sanctions and security guarantees for Ukraine.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy looks up at President Donald Trump outside of the West Wing before the two walk in for their meeting at the White House last month.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy looks up at President Donald Trump outside of the West Wing before the two walk in for their meeting at the White House last month. Photograph: Joey Sussman/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

In an interview with Sky News, published overnight, he said it was the missing piece to progress peace talks as he urged Trump to take “strong personal steps” to “stop Putin.”

He stressed that he hoped UK prime minister Keir Starmer could gain more clarity from Trump during his state visit to the UK, beginning tonight.

We may hear from Trump himself later as he makes his way to London.

Separately, US state secretary Marco Rubio told reporters in Israel that Trump would “probably” meet with Zelenskyy again during next week’s UN general assembly in New York.

“He’s going to keep trying. If peace is possible, he wants to achieve it,” Rubio said.

Elsewhere, the EU will be looking at the progress it’s made on competitiveness, a year on from the Draghi report that became an obligatory point of reference in all discussions on the bloc’s economy. EU’s Ursula von der Leyen and the man himself are up shortly.

President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen (R) and former prime minister of Italy, Mario Draghi (L) hold a press conference in Brussels, Belgium last year.
President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen (R) and former prime minister of Italy, Mario Draghi (L) hold a press conference in Brussels, Belgium last year. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

It’s Tuesday, 16 September 2025, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

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