“In that system (communism) and in this system we have always been a country where you could let a child walk out at ten at night. It’s been known to happen that some gangs in Split go wild and start shooting with Kalashnikovs, then nothing happens for 100 years,” Milanović said at Zemunik Air Base.
He reiterated that the odds of a drone crashing in Zagreb again as it did last week were small, adding that he believed the Hungarians had learnt something from the incident and that it was necessary to strengthen the air defence.
As for the French Rafale fighter jets flying over Zagreb this afternoon, the president said, “they are welcome if they can do that constantly, because it’s difficult to control the sky 24 hours a day, seven days a week. At the moment, probably nobody is doing that, not even Israel.”
He called on Prime Minister Andrej Plenković to “restrain his associates so that they don’t babble about the results of the investigation” into the drone crash until it was over.
“Once again I’m calling on, first and foremost the prime minister, who more or less watches what he says, but some of his associates act like silly children,” Milanović said.
The investigation is being done by the General Staff’s intelligence regiment, he said, adding that everything they knew he did, too, in real time, but that he did not talk about it until definitive data and conclusions were available.