Richard Beeston, Diplomatic Editor
RAF fighter jets were scrambled to intercept two Russian strategic
bombers heading for British airspace yesterday, as the spirit of the
Cold War returned to the North Atlantic once again.
The incident, described as rare by the RAF, served as a telling
metaphor for the stand-off between London and Moscow over the murder of
Alexander Litvinenko.
While the Kremlin hesitated before responding to Britain’s expulsion of
four diplomats, the Russian military engaged in some old-fashioned
sabre-rattling.
Two Tu95 “Bear” bombers were dispatched from their base on the Kola
Peninsula in the Arctic Circle and headed towards British airspace.
Russian military aircraft based near the northern port city of Murmansk
fly patrols off the Norwegian coast regularly, but the RAF said that it
was highly unusual for them to stray as far south as Scotland.
Two Tornado fighters, part of the RAF’s Quick Reaction Alert, took off
from RAF Leeming, in Yorkshire, to confront the Russian aircraft, after
they were shadowed by two F16s from the Royal Norwegian Air Force, The
Times has learnt.
“The Russians turned back before they reached British airspace,” an RAF
spokesman said.
There was no evidence to suggest that the incident was connected with
the diplomatic row over the extradition of Andrei Lugovoy, the main
suspect in the murder of Litvinenko.
Original
Source
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RAF scrambles to intercept Russian bombers
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