Denmark Quietly Debunks ‘Drone’ Sightings After Massive Response—But Won’t Admit It Publicly

Danish authorities have quietly confirmed that several high-profile “drone” sightings that triggered a massive international response last month were actually conventional aircraft—but they’re refusing to share these findings publicly, according to DR.dk, Denmark’s national broadcaster.

The revelation comes after Denmark deployed Ukrainian drone specialists, borrowed anti-drone equipment from Sweden and the United States, and mobilized NATO forces in response to what Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen called “the most serious attack on Danish critical infrastructure to date.” Now it appears some of those “attacks” never happened.

Denmark Quietly Debunks ‘Drone’ Sightings After Massive Response—But Won’t Admit It Publicly
Photo credit: Ilze Kusina / X

Investigation Debunks Multiple Sightings

According to DR.dk’s reporting, Denmark’s investigation has debunked several drone observations at both airports and military installations that authorities initially characterized as illegal drone activity. However, when the broadcaster asked Copenhagen Police and the Danish Defense Intelligence Service about the investigation status, authorities declined to provide details.

“The authorities did not want to give that,” DR reported, noting that officials are keeping the assessment confidential even as they acknowledge the difficulty in solving the entire drone mystery.

Aviation analyst UAVHive shared the findings on social media, noting authorities’ reluctance to go public. “Huge news, authorities in Denmark are aware mistakes are being made but don’t want it publicly to be known.”

Pattern Mirrors U.S. Aircraft Misidentification Cases

The Denmark debunking follows a well-documented pattern of drone panic driven by aircraft misidentification. Skeptical investigator Mick West, who runs the Metabunk forum, has extensively documented similar cases.

In a recent post about the Denmark incidents, West reminded critics that “the US Air Force released six videos of what military personnel thought were drones. The videos had metadata with exact date, time, and location. THEY WERE ALL PLANES.”

West also highlighted how distance and perspective create illusions. “Based on cases where we actually identified things, eyewitness accounts of drones resolve to:

  • ‘Large stationary Drone’ = A bright star, like Betelgeuse.
  • ‘Two Small Drones over…’ = Distant planes way behind.
  • ‘Drone network’ / ‘drones … in patterns’ = planes or satellites,”

West explained, citing patterns from Germany 2025, Wyoming 2024, Kansas 2020, and Nebraska 2019. His warning proved prescient: “People are arguing to aggressively shoot down ‘drones’ based on over-eager misidentifications like this. Not a good idea.”

Massive International Response to Phantom Threat

The September incidents prompted an extraordinary response. Denmark closed Copenhagen Airport for three hours, banned all civilian drone flights nationwide, and shut down multiple smaller airports. NATO deployed the German air defense frigate FGS Hamburg to the Baltic Sea, while France sent 35 personnel and anti-drone equipment.

Denmark Quietly Debunks ‘Drone’ Sightings After Massive Response—But Won’t Admit It Publicly
Photo credit: Trafikstyrelsen / X

DroneXL previously reported that a training aircraft—specifically a Socata TB-20 Trinidad with registration OY-CDT—was conducting flight exercises during at least one Copenhagen Airport “drone” sighting.

The pattern echoes the 2024 New Jersey drone panic, where thousands of reports turned out to be misidentified aircraft, planets, and stars. Federal investigations found that even a medical helicopter diversion—one of the incidents that sparked national concern—involved three commercial aircraft that appeared to hover because they were flying directly toward ground observers.

Questions About Transparency vs. Security Theater

Danish authorities continue investigating potential violations of airspace but refuse to share which sightings were debunked. The opacity raises uncomfortable questions: How many of the incidents that prompted NATO deployments and EU summit security measures were real threats versus mass misidentification?

While France recently seized a Russian-linked tanker suspected of launching drones near Denmark—suggesting some incidents may have been genuine—the confirmed debunking of multiple sightings undermines the narrative of a coordinated “hybrid attack.”

DroneXL’s Take

This story perfectly encapsulates a dangerous trend we’ve been tracking: the gap between genuine security threats and mass hysteria over misidentified aircraft. When we first covered the Denmark drone incidents, we drew parallels to New Jersey’s drone panic and questioned whether similar misidentification was at play. Turns out we, and many other drone experts, were right to be skeptical.

The real scandal isn’t just that authorities misidentified planes as drones—that’s understandable in low-light conditions with limited data. The scandal is that they won’t admit it publicly even after deploying massive international resources. Denmark borrowed equipment from allied nations, banned all civilian drone flights, disrupted thousands of travelers, and triggered NATO naval deployments. The public deserves to know which incidents were real and which were phantom threats.

Mick West and UAVHive deserve credit for pushing transparency and demonstrating the importance of metadata, flight tracking, and skeptical analysis. Their work shows that “I saw a drone” isn’t enough—you need date, time, location, and cross-referenced flight data to make definitive claims. Until Danish authorities release their full findings, the question remains: How much of this “hybrid attack” was actually just people looking at planes and planets?

What do you think? Share your thoughts in the comments below.


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Haye Kesteloo
Haye Kesteloo

Haye Kesteloo is a leading drone industry expert and Editor in Chief of DroneXL.co and EVXL.co, where he covers drone technology, industry developments, and electric mobility trends. With over nine years of specialized coverage in unmanned aerial systems, his insights have been featured in The New York Times, The Financial Times, and cited by The Brookings Institute, Foreign Policy, Politico and others.

Before founding DroneXL.co, Kesteloo built his expertise at DroneDJ. He currently co-hosts the PiXL Drone Show on YouTube and podcast platforms, sharing industry insights with a global audience. His reporting has influenced policy discussions and been referenced in federal documents, establishing him as an authoritative voice in drone technology and regulation. He can be reached at haye @ dronexl.co or @hayekesteloo.

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4 Comments

  1. All those “incidents” are just a part of something else, but a very good cover for media and excuse for additional control.
    What actually happened, we will never know.

    From my point of view, what happened give more power to authorities to control drone users whenever and wherever they want.

    From Russo Ukrainian war we learned how a tiny drone can carry an grenade. Additional equipment can be bought on Amazon for few euros or even printed at home with affordable 3D printer.

    Maybe those incidents were created as a part of operation for additional military anti drone purchases, as a good excuse for capturing objects and people as a potential threats to national security…
    Who knows.

    About admitting something, you know that quote:

    Rule #1; the boss is always right.
    Rule #2: if the boss is wrong, see rule #1
    😁
    Enjoy the best of the weekend!

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