Dmitry Medvedev, Russia’s former president and now the country’s deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council, mocked European leaders and told EU countries to “shut up” after a Russian drone struck a residential building in Romania on Friday, May 29. Medvedev is known for his increasingly inflammatory wartime rhetoric, including over a dozen threats to nuke Europe since 2022.JOIN US ON TELEGRAMFollow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official. In a Telegram post published on Friday, May 29, Medvedev mocked what he described as European outrage over a drone that crashed into an apartment building in the Romanian city of Galați. “The Euro-impotents are throwing a fit over a drone hitting some residential building in Romania,” Medvedev wrote. While acknowledging that the origin of the drone should be established, Medvedev argued that European countries had no right to complain because they support Ukraine militarily. “European nations are direct participants in the war against Russia,” he claimed without providing evidence. The remarks echoed long-standing Russian claims that the country is at war with NATO due to the bloc’s support for Kyiv’s defense against Moscow’s invasion. In April, Russia also threatened to hit drone companies in Europe. Medvedev on Friday accused European leaders of bearing responsibility for attacks inside Russia and suggested similar incidents affecting EU countries could happen again.