Lithuania purchased 48 Merops interceptor drones in April, drawing on the same Ukrainian-origin combat data that powered Gulf deployments earlier this year. The Merops interceptor was developed with feedback from sustained combat operations and has been deployed in the Middle East at scale, giving it a realism signal that NATO trials processes cannot replicate.
The purchase sits outside any NATO coordination framework or the EU AGILE programme . Lithuania's choice reflects the Baltic states' prioritisation of proven operational effectiveness over interoperability. Sweden deployed LVKV 90 anti-aircraft cannon systems to Latvia as a stopgap before GUTE II deliveries begin in 2027, a parallel emergency response that further fragments the regional counter-drone architecture.
Each Baltic state is buying what it can get fastest, from whichever vendor can deliver soonest. The result is a patchwork of systems that cannot talk to each other, precisely the gap the EU's 26 May coordination call was designed to address.
