Twenty-eight
Russian military planes were intercepted by NATO jets over the Baltic Sea earlier this week, the Latvian government
said. Officials on Thursday said the recent upturn in Russian activity over the
region is not a sign the Kremlin is “preparing to attack” but is testing NATO
defense and reaction times.
NATO confronted 28
planes on Monday–including Tu-95 and Tu-22 strategic bombers–over neutral
waters near Latvia ’s
maritime border, reported Bloomberg News. On Sunday, 13 Russian planes
were intercepted in the same area.
As Bloomberg notes,
the increase in Russian plane activity poses a threat to commercial airliners
because they fly sometimes with transponders turned off.
There’s been an
uptick in the number of Russian planes that have flown in the Baltic Sea in
recent months amid tensions between the West and the Kremlin over Russia ’s moves in eastern Ukraine .
NATO Secretary
General Jens Stoltenberg said last month that NATO’s interceptions of Russian
planes in the Baltic region have increased by about three times.
On Thursday, Polish
officials said that Russia ’s
military actions in the Baltic Sea region is a
new development and “unprecedented,” according to the BBC.
Defence Minister
Tomasz Siemoniak said the majority of the activity was in international waters
and airspace. He added that Sweden ,
which is not a NATO member state, is the country most affected.
Siemoniak said that
Russia
isn’t “preparing to attack” but it is testing NATO’s defenses. That, he added,
“does not serve to build good relationships and trust.”
As the BBC
reported, there were a few incidents in the region this week:
On Tuesday the
Norwegian military said one of its warplanes had a “near miss” with a Russian
fighter which had ventured too close, north of Norway
The Finnish air
force said that there had been “unusually intense” Russian activity over the
Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Finland, with most flights involving bombers,
fighters and transport planes heading between the Russian mainland and the Kaliningrad enclave, between Lithuania
and Poland
Nato said on Monday
the alliance’s jets intercepted Russian planes repeatedly in the Baltic, and
reported more than 30 types of Russian military aircraft in the area
More than a week
ago, a Russian fighter jet was involved in a “near-miss” with a Norwegian NATO
warplane north of Norway .
“The Russian
pilot’s behaviour was not quite normal,” Norwegian armed forces spokesman
Brynjar Stordal said.
The incident was
captured on video, which appears to show a fighter jet sweep very close to the
Norwegian plane. “We don’t know if it was a miscalculation or if he
deliberately put himself in the path of our F-16,” added Stordal, per The
Local.
NATO has station 14
aircraft in the Baltic nations as part of a regional air-policing initiative.
There were four aircraft in the countries before the crisis erupted in Ukraine .
Meanwhile, Britain said NATO planes were called on to look
for a suspected Russian submarine off the coast of Scotland , reported the National
Post. Aircraft from France ,
the US , and Canada were deployed to Scotland to
look for the submarine.
Angus Robertson, a
defense spokesperson with Scotland ,
said: “This is hugely embarrassing for the UK which is totally exposed without
such critical maritime patrol assets. It is not the first time they have had to
depend on the good will of allies to fill this massive capability gap.”
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