Germany has dramatically accelerated its national counter-drone strategy following a record number of unauthorized drone sightings near critical infrastructure, specifically major airports. The urgency was underscored by a recent shutdown at Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER), which halted all takeoffs and landings for nearly two hours after an unconfirmed drone sighting, resulting in flight diversions and stranding thousands of travelers for hours. This incident, which occurred on the evening of October 31, is part of a growing trend that German officials are now treating as a serious security and potential “hybrid threat.”
Record Incursions Force Policy Shift
German authorities have reported an alarming surge in drone incursions into restricted airspace. By the end of October, officials had logged more than 190 drone sightings near airports in 2025 alone—a significant increase from previous years. The problem is widespread, with major hubs like Munich Airport also being forced to suspend operations multiple times, disrupting travel for thousands of passengers and fueling national security concerns. Chancellor Friedrich Merz suggested the frequent incursions could be linked to “espionage activities” and attempts to disrupt public order.
The German government has responded with a dual-pronged approach involving both security mobilization and legislative reform:
* New Specialized Police Unit: Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt announced the commissioning of a new, specialized Federal Police drone defense unit. Starting with dozens of officers and planned to expand to over 100, this unit will be deployed immediately at airports and other sensitive sites nationwide. The unit’s mission is to detect, intercept, and, if necessary, disable hostile drones, utilizing both AI-supported jamming systems and dedicated interceptor drones.
* Legal Reform: The German Cabinet has approved revisions to the Air Security Act, granting federal police the new legal power to shoot down threatening drones in cases of acute threat or serious harm, moving past previous restrictions on kinetic counter-drone measures.
Investment in Cutting-Edge Defense Technology
Beyond policy changes, the German government is heavily investing in innovative drone defense systems and technologies. Recognizing that detection and defense are sovereign tasks of the state, parliament has approved over €100 million for 2025 and 2026 to procure advanced counter-drone systems from both domestic and Israeli manufacturers.
Measures being implemented to securitize the skies include:
* Radio-Based Detection: Equipping airports with radio-based systems for early drone detection and defense.
* Passive and Active Defenses: Exploring systems that rely on passive, AI-assisted sensor fusion (combining acoustic and optical tracking) rather than radar, and implementing both non-kinetic (jamming) and kinetic (interception) options.
* NATO Cooperation: Germany also recently hosted the US Army’s Project Flytrap 4.5, a large-scale exercise aimed at testing cutting-edge counter-unmanned aerial systems (C-UAS) technology for fast procurement and integration into NATO air defense systems.
The decisive action underscores the seriousness with which Germany is treating the drone threat, repositioning itself from a reactive stance to a proactive defense posture against what is increasingly seen as a new, hybrid form of attack on critical European infrastructure.
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