ANCHORAGE, Alaska: Russian warplane exercises around Alaska have become
routine in the past few months, U.S. military officials said Monday, as
the former Cold War superpower steps up flights from its Arctic bases.
Over the summer, Russian bombers have staged at least seven exercises
in a buffer zone outside U.S. air space, each time alerting the U.S.
through reports by Russian news agencies, said Maj. Allen Herritage, a
spokesman for the Alaska region of the North American Aerospace Defense
Command.
U.S. and Canadian fighter jets, including F-15s, were dispatched each
time to escort the Russian planes in the exercises, which ranged from
two to six aircraft, Herritage said.
The latest exercise came Sept. 19 and involved two planes flying
somewhere off the coast of Canada, Herritage said. They were met by
Canadian planes from NORAD, which is jointly operated by the U.S. and
Canadian militaries.
At least five exercises by the Russian Tu-95 Bear heavy bombers have
taken place off Alaska's Aleutian Islands and other historic Cold War
outposts, such as Cape Lisburne and St. Lawrence Island, according to
NORAD records. All occurred beyond the 12-mile boundary that
constitutes U.S. airspace.
"They used to have them from time to time, but not nearly in this
frequency," Herritage said. "These exercises used to be more common
during the Cold War."
The exercises come amid troubled relations between Russia and the West
and are seen by some as intimidating moves by an increasingly assertive
Russia, but Herritage said the exercises are not a cause for alarm.
"The recent exercises appear to be routine training activities," he
told The Associated Press. "They are nowhere near U.S. airspace."
President Vladimir Putin announced in August that Russia was resuming
long-range bomber flights over the Pacific, Atlantic and Arctic oceans
for the first time since the breakup of the Soviet Union.
Russian Air Force officials could not be reached for comment after
hours. They have repeatedly said that the planes were not violating any
nation's airspace or any international agreements.
But in mid-September, British and Norwegian jets intercepted Russian
military aircraft after they breached NATO airspace close to the U.K.
and Finland. And on a handful of occasions this year, NATO nations,
including Britain and Norway, have sent fighters to escort Russian
bombers nearing their territory.
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Russia steps up bomber exercises near Alaska and Canada
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