THE DANISH Prime Minister said he is preparing for “more attacks” and a “hybrid war” after drones targeted the same airport for a second night in a row.
Mette Frederiksen tonight warned of potential Russian interference as Europe teeters on the edge of war.
Frederiksen cautioned: “We must expect more attacks.
“We must expect that there may be more drone attacks on critical infrastructure.”
The threat to national security, he added, is “far from over”.
Aalborg airport was closed for about an hour this evening after cops suspected a drone flying overhead.
This is the second time in two days drones are thought to have hovered over the airport.
Copenhagen police said they have been “inundated with reports” but believe many residents are confusing lights with the devices.
An airport spokesperson said: “We do not know how many drones there are, and I encourage you to direct specific questions to the North Jutland Police.
“At the moment we have no overview of how many departures are affected, and we also have no time horizon.”
Russia’s involvement has not been ruled out, though cops are yet to confirm who is behind the drones.
On Wednesday, at least three flights were diverted — two back to Copenhagen and one from Amsterdam rerouted to Billund — after the sudden lockdown.
It is not yet known how many drones there were or where they came from.
Aalborg sits in northern Denmark’s Jutland region and ranks as the country’s fourth-biggest city by population.
It comes just days after Copenhagen Airport, the busiest hub in the Nordic region, was shut down for four hours when two or three unidentified drones swooped dangerously close to the runways.
The eerie pattern has sparked fears of a Russian hand behind the incursions.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky claimed the mystery drones that grounded flights in Copenhagen — and later Oslo — were part of “Russia’s violations of the airspace of Nato member states.”
He warned: “If there is no resolute response from the allies – both states and institutions – to aggressive provocations, Russia will continue them.”
While Danish police have not confirmed any link, they have warned the aircraft appear to be controlled by a “capable actor.”
Jes Jespersen, senior police inspector of the Copenhagen Police, said earlier this week: “It all indicates that you are not out to attack anyone, but you are out to show off and maybe to practice.”
Denmark’s intelligence agency has already declared the country faces a “high threat of sabotage.”
Defence and security analyst Colonel Simon Diggins told The Sun the drone chaos is part of a wider Kremlin plot: “Whether it be cyber attacks or flying drones over an airport, it creates an atmosphere of distrust, subversion, and sabotage very quickly and very rapidly.
“This is exactly what is going on at the moment.
“Russia is testing our defences, testing our resilience, testing our infrastructure to see where our points of weakness are.”
Over the weekend, airports across Europe — including Heathrow, Brussels and Berlin — were also hammered by crippling cyberattacks, fuelling fears of a coordinated hybrid assault.