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NATO says it is working to counter Russia's GPS jamming after interference with EU leader's plane

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NATO says it is working to counter Russia's GPS jamming after interference with EU leader's plane
News

News

NATO says it is working to counter Russia's GPS jamming after interference with EU leader's plane

2025-09-02 23:04 Last Updated At:23:11

LUXEMBOURG (AP) — NATO is working to thwart Russian jamming of civilian flights, said the alliance's chief on Tuesday, two days after a jet carrying European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen lost its ability to use GPS navigation midair in Bulgarian airspace.

The plane landed safely on Sunday, but Bulgarian authorities said they suspected Russia was behind the interference.

“It is taken very seriously," said NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte during a news conference in Luxembourg with the duchy's prime minister and defense minister. “I can assure you that we are working day and night to counter this, to prevent it, and to make sure that they will not do it again.” He did not elaborate.

Neither Russia nor von der Leyen has commented publicly on the incident. The EU and NATO are separate entities with different sets of member countries, but Europe’s security is a vital issue for both.

Rutte said the jamming was part of a complex campaign by Russia of “hybrid threats” like cutting of undersea cables in the Baltic Sea, a plot to assassinate a German industrialist, and a cyberattack on the National Heath Service in the United Kingdom.

“I have always hated the words hybrid because it sounds so cuddly, but hybrid is exactly this jamming of commercial airplanes, with potentially disastrous effects," he said.

The Associated Press has plotted almost 80 incidents on a map tracking a campaign of disruption across Europe blamed on Russia, which the head of Britain’s foreign intelligence service has described as "staggeringly reckless.” Since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Western officials have accused Russia and its proxies of staging dozens of attacks and other incidents, ranging from vandalism to arson and attempted assassination.

The interference from Russia includes jamming and spoofing. Jamming means a strong radio signal overwhelms communications, whereas spoofing misleads a receiver into thinking it is in a different location or in a past or future time period.

“The threat from the Russians is increasing every day. Let’s not be naive about it: this might also involve one day Luxembourg, it might come to the Netherlands," Rutte said. “With the latest Russian missile technology for example, the difference now between Lithuania on the front line and Luxembourg, The Hague or Madrid is five to 10 minutes. That’s the time it takes this missile to reach these parts of Europe.”

The whole continent was under “direct threat from the Russians,” he warned. "We are all on the eastern flank now, whether you live in London or Tallinn.”

Bulgaria will not investigate the jamming of von der Leyen’s plane because “such things happen every day,” Bulgarian Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov said Tuesday.

He said it was one of the side effects of Russia's war in Ukraine and had occurred across Europe.

- Associated Press writer Veselin Toshkov in Sofia, Bulgaria contributed to this report.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, center, walks with Luxembourg's Prime Minister Luc Frieden, second right, and Luxembourg's Defense Minister Yuriko Backes, second left, prior to a meeting in Luxembourg, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil)

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, center, walks with Luxembourg's Prime Minister Luc Frieden, second right, and Luxembourg's Defense Minister Yuriko Backes, second left, prior to a meeting in Luxembourg, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil)

From left, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, Luxembourg's Prime Minister Luc Frieden and Luxembourg's Defense Minister Yuriko Backes address a media conference in Luxembourg, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil)

From left, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, Luxembourg's Prime Minister Luc Frieden and Luxembourg's Defense Minister Yuriko Backes address a media conference in Luxembourg, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil)

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, center, walks with Luxembourg's Prime Minister Luc Frieden, center right, and Luxembourg's Defense Minister Yuriko Backes, center left, prior to a meeting in Luxembourg, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil)

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, center, walks with Luxembourg's Prime Minister Luc Frieden, center right, and Luxembourg's Defense Minister Yuriko Backes, center left, prior to a meeting in Luxembourg, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil)

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 20, 2026--

Global data center markets are entering a new phase of expansion defined not simply by growth, but by increasingly strategic and selective development, according to Cushman & Wakefield’s 2026 Global Data Center Market Comparison report. For the first time, Dallas ranked as the No. 1 primary data center market in the world, followed by Atlanta (2), Virginia (3), Columbus (4) and Johor (5). Austin-San Antonio and West Texas led the secondary and tertiary market rankings, underscoring Texas’ growing importance as a large-scale AI infrastructure hub.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260520183490/en/

Driven by accelerating AI adoption, cloud computing demand and digital infrastructure investment, global capacity under construction approached 31.7 gigawatts (GW) in 2025, more than doubling from 12.5GW reported in the prior edition of the report. At the same time, developers, occupiers and investors are facing intensifying constraints tied to power availability, land use, permitting timelines and growing regulatory scrutiny.

“The global data center industry has entered a period of managed growth,” said John McWilliams, Head of Data Center Insights at Cushman & Wakefield. “Demand fundamentals remain extraordinarily strong, but the industry is no longer operating in an environment of unconstrained expansion. Power delivery timelines, land availability, community sentiment and regulation are now playing a much larger role in determining where and how data centers get built.”

The report analyzes 107 global markets across 24 variables tied to commercial real estate fundamentals, power infrastructure, development activity, regulation and operational risk and provides a more forward looking approach to evaluate market dynamics than previous editions.

Americas Continue to Dominate Global Development Activity

The Americas remain the center of global data center development activity, accounting for approximately 80% of all capacity currently under construction worldwide.

Virginia maintained its position as the world’s largest data center market with 11.3GW of operational capacity, while Texas emerged as one of the industry’s fastest-growing and most scalable regions as large scale data center development activity expands into numerous parts of the state.

The report highlights West Texas as a rapidly growing AI infrastructure hub, with 2.9GW currently under construction, exceeding the entire amount of capacity underway across the EMEA region.

“The scale of development occurring across parts of the U.S. is unprecedented from a commercial real estate perspective,” McWilliams said. “Developers are increasingly prioritizing markets that can provide scalable land, reliable power infrastructure and a regulatory environment supportive of long-term expansion.”

Across the Americas, preleasing activity remains exceptionally strong. Approximately 89% of capacity currently under construction is already pre-committed when hyperscale self-build activity is included, underscoring continued imbalance between supply and demand.

The report also notes that planned capacity across the Americas increased more than fourfold year-over-year, rising from 46.1GW in 2024 to 191.3GW by the end of 2025.

Power Availability Continues to be a Defining Commercial Real Estate Variable

According to the report, access to power has remained one of the defining variables shaping global data center development strategy.

Globally, average power delivery timelines for new large-load requests now stand at 4.4 years, with timelines extending to approximately five years across both the Americas and EMEA.

As a result, developers are increasingly pursuing powered land opportunities, integrating private generation into projects and expanding into secondary and tertiary markets where infrastructure constraints may be less severe.

“The industry’s focus has shifted from simply securing land to securing deliverable power,” said McWilliams. “That dynamic is fundamentally reshaping data center real estate strategy worldwide.”

The report also identifies growing divergence between markets able to support long-term AI infrastructure expansion and those facing mounting regulatory, infrastructure or community-related barriers to growth.

About the Report

The 2026 Global Data Center Market Comparison evaluates 107 global markets using 24 variables across market fundamentals, terrestrial considerations, power infrastructure and political/regulatory conditions. The report examines operational capacity, development pipelines, vacancy, absorption, cloud presence, land availability, power delivery timelines and other factors influencing global data center development decisions.

The full report can be found here.

About Cushman & Wakefield

Cushman & Wakefield (NYSE: CWK) is a leading global commercial real estate services firm for occupiers and investors with approximately 53,000 employees in over 350 offices and nearly 60 countries. In 2025, the firm reported revenue of $10.3 billion across its core service lines of Services, Leasing, Capital markets, and Valuation and other. Built around the belief that Better never settles, the firm receives numerous industry and business accolades for its award-winning culture. For additional information, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com.

Top cities for data centers as ranked by Cushman & Wakefield's 2026 Global Data Center Market Comparison

Top cities for data centers as ranked by Cushman & Wakefield's 2026 Global Data Center Market Comparison

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