NATO Scrambles Fighter Jets To Defend Against 'Massive' Russian Attack
Source: Newsweek
Published Feb 26, 2026 at 02:53 AM EST updated Feb 26, 2026 at 05:50 AM EST
NATO member Poland has deployed fighter jets in response to Russian attacks on Ukraine. The Polish armed forces posted on X that the aircraft had been deployed following "another massive attack" by Russia on Ukraine. It added that "ground-based air defense systems and radar reconnaissance have reached a state of maximum readiness."
Poland said the deployments were preventative in nature, and "aimed at securing the airspace and its protection, particularly in areas adjacent to the threatened zones."
In a follow up post three hours later, the Polish armed forces said that the deployment of its aircraft had ended, and that ground-based air defense systems and radar reconnaissance systems had returned to standard operational activities.
Polish airspace had not been breached by the Russia attacks, the post added without mentioning any locations in the latest measure taken by the NATO member following Russian bombardment of Ukrainian cities.
Read more: https://www.newsweek.com/nato-scrambles-fighter-jets-defend-against-massive-russian-attack-11584388
Torchlight
(6,657 posts)which is a significant one day expense of precious Russian war munitions. Ukraines air defenses intercepted most. This morning, Russia was issuing statements arguing against a posture not in evidence: the presence of additional NATO troops (Britain was specifically singled out) would increase the cost of lives and land or some such.
I can't conclude anything from all this, but collectively it seems odd.
Cirsium
(3,771 posts)NATO did not scramble fighter jets "to defend against 'massive' Russian attack."
"Polish airspace had not been breached by the Russia attacks..."
BumRushDaShow
(168,061 posts)26.02.2026 09:45
The Operational Command of Poland's Armed Forces said it had deployed "all necessary forces and resources at its disposal" to ensure the safety of Polish airspace and was "monitoring the situation on an ongoing basis."
Polish and allied aircraft were activated in the morning, the Operational Command said in a statement, adding that measures were taken to ensure security in areas near the Ukrainian border.
The Polish Air Navigation Services Agency (PANSA) said civilian airports in the cities of Rzeszów and Lublin were temporarily closed to allow military aircraft to operate freely in response to the Russian strikes on western Ukraine. The two airports resumed operations hours later, state news agency PAP reported.
At about 7 a.m., the Operational Command said the threat of Russian missile strikes on regions bordering Poland had decreased and that Polish and allied aircraftwere returning to base.
(snip)
Link to tweet
@DowOperSZ
Operowanie wojskowego lotnictwa w polskiej przestrzeni powietrznej, związane z uderzeniami Federacji Rosyjskiej na Ukrainę, zostało zakończone. Uruchomione naziemne systemy obrony powietrznej oraz rozpoznania radiolokacyjnego powróciły do standardowej działalności operacyjnej.
Informujemy, że nie zaobserwowano naruszenia przestrzeni powietrznej RP.
Dziękujemy za wsparcie @NATO
, @NATO_AIRCOM
oraz Siłom Powietrznym Niemiec #Luftwaffe 🇩🇪, których samoloty pomagały dziś zapewnić bezpieczeństwo na polskim niebie. Podziękowania kierujemy także do Holenderskich Sił Zbrojnych 🇳🇱 @Defensie
za wsparcie systemami obrony powietrznej.
#WojskoPolskie 🇵🇱, zgodnie z założeniami operacji #WschodniaZorza, na bieżąco monitoruje sytuację na terytorium Ukrainy i pozostaje w stałej gotowości do zapewnienia bezpieczeństwa polskiej przestrzeni powietrznej.
#PołączeniDlaBezpieczeństwa🤝#JointForSecurity
Image
Ministerstwo Obrony Narodowej 🇵🇱 and 7 others
1:24 AM · Feb 26, 2026
TRANSLATION
We would like to inform you that no violation of Polish airspace was observed.
We thank @NATO
, @NATO_AIRCOM
, and the German Air Force #Luftwaffe 🇩🇪 for their support, whose aircraft helped ensure safety in Polish skies today. We also thank the Dutch Armed Forces 🇳🇱 @Defensie
for their support with air defense systems.
#WojskoPolskie 🇵🇱 , in accordance with the assumptions of operation #WschodniaZorza , constantly monitors the situation in the territory of Ukraine and remains in constant readiness to ensure the security of Polish airspace.
#PołączeniDlaBezpieczeństwa🤝#JointForSecurity
Sometimes "a cigar is just a cigar".
Cirsium
(3,771 posts)I am not so sure Poland is under threat. They are perhaps a provocateur in this scenario.
On the night of the June 1st presidential run-off election in Poland, Rafał Trzaszkowski must have experienced an especially bitter sense of déjà vu. The mayor of Warsaw and candidate of the centrist Civic Platform party had narrowly lost to Karol Nawrocki, the candidate of the right-wing Law and Justice party, 49% to 51%. Five years earlier, Trzaszkowski had lost by almost exactly the same margin to the sitting president and previous Law and Justice candidate, Andrzej Duda. This was not the outcome that most observers had anticipated. Through the winter and spring, polling on such a second-round match-up had shown the Civic Platform candidate with a consistent lead. A Trzaszkowski victory, it was expected, would reinforce the narrow majority won by Civic Platform and its coalition allies in legislative elections in the autumn of 2023, allowing the government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk to push through its programme more boldly, without fear of presidential vetoes. Instead, Poland seems to be stuck in a protracted stand-off, with slight fluctuations in turnout and pendular movements among a narrow stratum of swing voters determining final results. This polarized landscape looks eerily similar to other democracies around the world, especially the Trump-era United States.
For centrists, the seemingly persistent demographic profiles of the rival voting blocsa nationalist movement drawing on older, male, rural, and less educated voters vs. a centre-left coalition of younger, more female, more urban, and more highly educated votersoffered reason for long-term hope, even if immediate outcomes were often dispiriting. The latter constituencies, after all, had to represent the future. As long as they were effectively mobilized, the challenge of the new right would eventually fade. But the voting patterns of 2025, while confirming or even amplifying most familiar recent demographic divides (gender; size of community; levels of education), turned on its head perhaps the most fundamental of all electoral assumptions, not only in Poland but across most other democracies: that support for the right and the far right increases with age. In 2020, exit polls showed Trzaszkowski winning 64% of voters under 30 and only 38% of voters over 60. Five years later, these surveys indicated that his support among voters under 30 had plummeted to 47%, lower than his share of the vote of those over 60, which had risen to 49%. Early signs of this seismic shift among young voters were already evident in the parliamentary elections in 2023, when, according to exit polls, the far-right Confederation for an Independent Poland won 18% of the youngest cohort of voters. In the first round of voting in the presidential election, two candidates associated with the ConfederationSławomir Mentzen and Grzegorz Brauncumulatively won 40% of voters under 30, eclipsing support for the candidates of the two leading parties.
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/what-polands-election-tells-us-about-a-new-generation-of-right-wing-voters
BumRushDaShow
(168,061 posts)and Russia is sending those longer range missiles and drones that way (partiuclarly any towards Lviv), then they end up often being "in the line of fire".
And then there is the suspected "sabotage" coming out of Belarus - Russia's hybrid warfare rattles Poland and NATO
Poland has the 2nd highest number of Ukrainian refugees in Europe behind Germany - https://www.diis.dk/en/research/forced-displacement-from-ukraine-the-potential-role-of-migration-in-ukraines-future

Poland has had many issues with Ukraine - notably farm exports/quotas. But given their past history with the effects of fascism, and knowing that some countries in Europe and/or in the EU are going RW, they are still relatively benign compared to a country like Hungary (and if anything, we know that Belarus is instigating like mad).
I don't trust the right wing in Poland.
Wuddles440
(2,052 posts)Cirsium
(3,771 posts)Just because Putin isn't trustworthy that doesn't mean the Polish government is. That isn't logical.
Wuddles440
(2,052 posts)Only Pedo Don, his ass kissing lackeys, and inbred, MAGAT zombies would think otherwise.
Cirsium
(3,771 posts)This has nothing to do with "Pedo Don, his ass kissing lackeys, and inbred, MAGAT zombies" and it is out of line to suggest that.
Escurumbele
(4,071 posts)involved should be able to throw punches?
Amaryllis
(11,177 posts)nwduke
(500 posts)Fore Trump and Putin invade NATO countries! After all, they are best buds!🤬