On the morning of 10 May, the scramble order came down at Zeltweg Air Base. Austrian Eurofighters — vectored onto an unidentified contact threading through alpine airspace without so much as a filed flight plan. Priority A. The contact turned out to be a U.S. military U-28A Draco, a militarized Pilatus PC-12 operated by U.S. Air Force Special Operations Command. It happened again the next day. Austria is not amused.
The Austrian Air Force confirmed it launched Eurofighter Typhoons on two consecutive days — May 10 and 11 — to intercept American special operations aircraft that had entered Austrian sovereign airspace without prior clearance. The U-28As, which are turboprop aircraft frequently used for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions as well as light attack support, appeared to be using Austrian airspace as a transit shortcut — a well-worn route for U.S. aircraft moving between Germany and Italy or further east toward the Middle East. Austria’s policy is that no foreign military aircraft may enter its airspace without explicit permission. That policy was violated twice in 48 hours.
Vienna invoked diplomatic channels immediately. What started as an air traffic control anomaly became, very quickly, a démarche. For a nation whose constitutional neutrality has been a cornerstone of its post-war identity since 1955, the repeated intrusion by American special operations aircraft carries weight that goes well beyond airspace management.
Quick Facts
- Dates: May 10–11, 2025 — two separate intercepts on consecutive days
- Intercepting aircraft: Austrian Air Force Eurofighter Typhoon
- Intruder: U-28A Draco (militarized Pilatus PC-12), U.S. Air Force Special Operations Command
- Intercept priority: Priority A (highest urgency)
- Departure/Return: Aircraft returned to Munich area airfield
- Austria’s status: Constitutionally neutral since 1955 (Austrian State Treaty)
- Response: Diplomatic channels invoked by Vienna
The U-28A Draco: A PC-12 in Uniform
To the untrained eye, the U-28A looks like any executive turboprop — a sleek, single-engine Pilatus PC-12, the kind you’d find parked at small airports from Zurich to Innsbruck. The Swiss-made PC-12 is one of the world’s most popular utility turboprops, prized for its range, rough-field capability, and reliability. USAF Special Operations Command saw potential in that civilian respectability and ordered a militarized version, the U-28A Draco, in the mid-2000s.
The Draco is considerably less innocent than it appears. Behind the PC-12 fuselage skin sits a suite of ISR sensors, communications equipment, and intelligence-gathering systems whose specifics remain classified. The aircraft operates from austere airstrips, in small formations or solo, often without the large logistical footprint that betrays conventional military operations. It is, in other words, exactly the kind of aircraft designed to move quietly through complex airspace — which makes its appearance in Austrian airspace without clearance either a significant procedural failure or something more deliberate.

Austria’s Neutrality: More Than a Formality
Austria’s constitutional neutrality is not a diplomatic courtesy — it is a hard legal commitment enshrined in the Austrian State Treaty of 1955, the agreement that ended Allied occupation and restored Austrian sovereignty after World War II. The price of that sovereignty was permanent neutrality: no military alliances, no foreign military bases, no participation in wars. Austria is not a NATO member. It participates in EU security frameworks but maintains its fundamental non-aligned posture as a matter of national identity.
That context matters enormously when two American military aircraft — not civilian, not commercial, but special operations aircraft — transit Austrian airspace without permission on back-to-back days. The Priority A intercept designation means the Austrian Air Force treated these contacts as potential threats requiring immediate response. The Eurofighters were vectored in on a scramble basis, not a routine intercept. Whatever the U-28As were doing in Austrian airspace, Vienna took it seriously.
U.S. military aircraft regularly use Austria as a geographic shortcut. The Austrian Alps create a tempting corridor for aircraft transiting between U.S. Air Force bases in Germany — Ramstein, Spangdahlem — and Italy, where Aviano hosts the 31st Fighter Wing. From there, Austria is a useful bridge toward the Balkans, Greece, and the broader Middle East theater. The corridor saves time and fuel. It also requires Austrian clearance, which is routinely obtained through diplomatic channels for scheduled military transits. The U-28As apparently didn’t follow that process.

The Diplomatic Fallout
Vienna’s invocation of diplomatic channels is the formal language of sovereign displeasure. In practice, it means the Austrian Foreign Ministry has contacted the U.S. Embassy, demanded an explanation, and likely asked for assurances that the violations will not be repeated. Whether Washington offers those assurances — and how it characterizes the incursions internally — will determine whether this remains a bilateral irritant or escalates into something that attracts broader European attention.
Austria’s position within the European Union gives these incidents a resonance beyond bilateral U.S.-Austrian relations. Several EU member states have been increasingly vocal about American military activities in European airspace and territory, particularly as Washington has at times shown impatience with European diplomatic norms. An incident where U.S. special operations aircraft trigger a Priority A intercept over Alpine airspace — twice — is not the kind of headline that eases those tensions.
A Pattern Worth Watching
This is not the first time U.S. military aircraft have navigated European airspace in ways that create diplomatic friction. The geography of NATO’s eastern flank, combined with the surge in military activity since 2022, has produced significant airspace management challenges across the continent. But those frictions have generally occurred within NATO airspace, between allies who share a common framework for deconfliction. Austria is outside that framework by constitutional design.
For the U-28A program specifically, this incident highlights a tension inherent in how special operations aviation operates. The Draco is designed for discreet, flexible deployment — the kind of aircraft that moves without fanfare. But discretion is not the same as exemption from sovereignty. Two scrambled Eurofighters and an activated diplomatic dossier are the Alps’ way of making that point clear.
Washington will almost certainly offer a quiet apology and an explanation involving procedural error. Whether that explanation is accepted at face value in Vienna is another question entirely. Austria has been watching the war in Ukraine and American military posture in Europe with careful attention. A neutral nation scrambling its jets twice in 48 hours against American aircraft is not a story that Vienna will simply file away.
Sources: Austrian Ministry of Defence, Air & Space Forces Magazine, Defense News, Reuters, Jane’s Defence Weekly




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