Ukrainian-type strike drone crashes in Latvia

Key Points
  • Two drones crossed from Russia into Latvian airspace overnight on May 7, with one crashing at an oil storage facility in Rezekne, striking an empty tank and causing a fire.
  • Latvia's State Police opened a criminal investigation and airspace threat alerts were declared across Balvi, Ludza, and Rezekne municipalities before being lifted at 8:25 AM.

Two foreign drones crossed from Russia into Latvian airspace overnight and crashed in the Latgale region in the early hours of May 7, with one striking an oil storage facility in Rezekne and igniting a fire that emergency services extinguished before dawn.

Latvia’s State Police confirmed that operational services at the oil storage facility on Komunālā Street in Rezekne found what appeared to be drone debris, according to the police statement.

Rezekne municipality council chairman Guntars Skudra confirmed to the Latvian news agency LETA that one of the drones came down on the territory of the Rezekne branch of East-West Transit LLC, striking an empty oil storage tank. Firefighters from the State Fire and Rescue Service responded after multiple calls to emergency number 112 around 3:30 in the morning reporting a possible fire at the oil storage facility. When crews arrived, active open burning had already stopped, but inspection of the tanks with thermal cameras found elevated temperature was not detected in them, the fire service reported. Four oil storage tanks sustained damage from external impact, according to findings at the scene. The tanks contained no petroleum products at the time. One tank had smoldering cladding across approximately 30 square meters, which was extinguished promptly. Latvia’s State Police opened a criminal investigation into the incident.

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An airspace threat alert was declared early Thursday morning across the Balvi, Ludza, and Rezekne municipalities following the drone incursions. Schools in Rezekne and the Rezekne and Ludza municipalities cancelled classes, while Balvi switched to remote learning, according to Latvian public broadcaster LSM. The alert was lifted at approximately 8:25 in the morning. Residents of Rezekne told LSM’s Latgale studio they had heard drone and aircraft sounds before receiving the cell broadcast warning and were initially confused about what was happening.

The drone’s origin is not formally confirmed, but footage and images circulating online show a wreckage closely resembling the Ukrainian FP-1 long-range strike drone, the type Kyiv uses for deep strikes against targets inside Russia. That visual similarity has generated significant attention, but an important caveat applies directly to the incident: it cannot be confirmed at this stage whether the drone was actually Ukrainian, or whether it was a Russian drone deliberately redirected or launched toward NATO territory with the aim of discrediting Ukraine.

The Russian military has both the incentive and the capability to launch or redirect drones in ways designed to create political problems for Ukraine among its NATO allies, and the timing of an incident like this, just days before Victory Day and amid active ceasefire negotiations, makes attribution particularly sensitive.

Latvia is a NATO member state, and a drone originating from Russian territory crashing on Latvian soil is an Alliance matter regardless of whose drone it turns out to be. A Russian drone violating NATO airspace is one kind of provocation. A Ukrainian drone accidentally crossing into a NATO ally’s territory and striking infrastructure is a different problem entirely, but both scenarios carry serious implications for the alliance’s cohesion and for Ukraine’s relationship with its European partners. Latvia has been among Ukraine’s most consistent supporters since February 2022, and Latvian authorities will be conducting the criminal investigation and forensic analysis that may eventually clarify the drone’s origin, design, and flight path.

The Latgale region, where both drones came down, sits in eastern Latvia directly on the border with Russia and Belarus, making it geographically the most exposed part of Latvian territory to drone incursions from the east. Rezekne, the city where the oil facility was struck, is the largest city in Latgale and has significant logistics and infrastructure importance. The oil storage facility that was hit belongs to East-West Transit, a company whose name reflects the transit corridor function that has historically connected Russian energy exports with Baltic ports.

The fact that the tanks were empty at the time of impact is the only piece of unambiguously good news in an otherwise troubling incident. An empty tank struck by a drone produces fire and structural damage. A full tank struck by the same drone could produce an entirely different outcome. The incident has exposed the vulnerability of energy infrastructure in border regions to drone incursions, whether accidental or deliberate, and will likely accelerate discussions within NATO about air defense coverage of the alliance’s eastern flank at altitudes and ranges where commercial and military drones operate.

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