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Telegraph: British troops can now shoot drones down on sight

The Telegraph reported that British troops would be given new power to shoot down drones that threaten UK military bases. This was based on an announcement made by British Defence Minister John Healey on Monday.

The newspaper reported that Healey would reveal his vision for how Britain can protect its most important military bases as a response to the growing threat from Russia.

The Telegraph, citing an anonymous source, reported that the British government "was not ruling out" extending the powers to other sites of importance, such as airports.

According to The Telegraph, troops are currently able to use counter-drone specialist equipment that can track drones coming in, hijack their signals and divert them. The Telegraph added that the new proposal would give soldiers and Ministry of Defence Police an "kinetic option" of shooting them on-site, something they could only do in extreme situations.

Healey's Office did not respond immediately to a comment request. The British defence ministry was not immediately reachable.

In October, Britain announced that two Royal Air Force planes were flying a

Twelve-hour Mission

The U.S. and NATO troops will patrol the border with Russia alongside U.S. forces, claiming that this operation follows incursions in the airspace of NATO countries such as Poland, Romania, and Estonia.

Drones are becoming more popular.

Airspace disruption

In recent years, unmanned aerial vehicles have repeatedly invaded Europe, causing airport closures and flight cancellations.

As tensions between the West and Russia have increased over its actions, fingers have been pointed in Russia's direction.

Despite Moscow's denials, there is evidence of Russian involvement in Ukraine.

Monitoring service Enigma has detected at least 18 drones in Denmark, Sweden Norway and Germany since September 16. Many, but not all, were in close proximity to airports.

(source: Reuters)