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The Russian Medvedev says that Drone's disruption is a useful memory for Europeans of the danger

    Moscow (Reuters) -Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said on Monday that it remained a mystery that was behind a wave of drone disturbance in various European countries, but that the incidents served as a useful memory of Europeans of the dangers of the war.

    Medvedev, now deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council, played the theory that recent disturbance, including for airport traffic in Germany and Denmark, was the result of all the actions related to Russia or troops that sympathized with it.

    “People who sympathize with our country (in Europe) will not waste their resources by clogging. Our 'agents and moles' are waiting for a separate order,” Medvedev wrote on his official telegram channel.

    Medvedev, who has built up a reputation for himself as a distinct anti-Western Havik, said that the most important thing, regardless of who was responsible, was that European citizens had received a taste of what a war could mean for their continent, something that he had the French President Emmanuel Macron and the German Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Stook for financial and financial reasons.

    “The most important thing is that short -sighted Europeans feel the danger of war on their own skin. That they fear and vibrate like stupid animals in a herd that is driven to slaughter,” said Medvedev, who said he hoped that people could turn on Merz and Macron.

    European talk about the use of frozen Russian assets to finance Ukrainian weapons purchases, together with talking about shooting Russian planes that stray in European airspace and are planning to collect “a drone wall”, Russian government officials who have repeatedly said that they have not been a navo.

    (Reporting by Andrew Osbornedding by Guy Faulconbridge)