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A Royal Air Force Dassault Falcon 900LX carrying UK Defence Secretary John Healey had its satellite navigation and internet signals jammed during a three‑hour flight after leaving Estonia, British and media sources reported.
The incident, which took place on May 21 and was reported by UK outlets on May 24–25, left pilots relying on backup inertial navigation while passengers — including military advisers, a lieutenant‑general, photographers and a journalist — were unable to use onboard internet.
Multiple outlets and defence sources said the disruption was consistent with Russian electronic warfare activity near the Russian border, though it is not clear whether Healey was deliberately targeted.
The episode follows recent dangerous Russian intercepts of an RAF reconnaissance aircraft over the Black Sea and echoes earlier GPS disruptions affecting government flights in the region.
UK officials described the interference as reckless and stressed RAF crews are prepared to operate under such conditions; the Ministry of Defence has declined to provide detailed public comment.
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The disruption is consistent with broad, non‑selective jamming rather than proof of a targeted attack, and underscores calls for stronger European coordination, hardened navigation systems and better allied information‑sharing to counter recurring electronic warfare near NATO borders.






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