NATO, Russia and fighter jets
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NATO has intercepted Russian bombers and fighter jets over the Baltic Sea. French Rafale fighters deployed from Lithuania joined jets from Sweden, Finland, Poland, Denmark, and Romania to monitor the Russian flight on Monday.
The military alliance routinely scrambles fighter aircraft to intercept Russian warplanes that approach or fly near NATO airspace. NATO says the Russian planes it intercepts often fail to use their transponders and don't communicate with air traffic controllers or file a flight plan. NATO jets are sent up to identify them.
Tampa Free Press on MSN
Baltic skies erupt with activity as NATO jets swarm Russian bombers
Military tensions flared over the Baltic Sea on Monday as a massive contingent of NATO fighter jets scrambled to intercept a fleet of Russian strategic bombers and escort planes. The encounter, which took place far from the ongoing global focus on the Middle East,
Within minutes of takeoff from the Šiauliai Air Base in Lithuania, they were over the Baltic Sea, first intercepting a Russian Il-20 reconnaissance aircraft and then tailing supersonic Russian bombers and their fighter escorts that neared the airspace of multiple NATO countries.
Two French Air and Space Force Rafale B jets scrambled from Šiauliai, escorting a Russian Il-20 spy plane in the first interception of their current Baltic Air Policing rotation.
Western officials say undersea infrastructure sabotage is down since NATO began a security mission in the Baltic Sea.US Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Alexandria Serrano NATO's security operation to protect critical undersea infrastructure in the Baltic ...
FRENCH fighter jets have been deployed four times in one week to intercept Russian aircraft near Nato airspace. Authorities scrambled four Rafale B fighters as part of an “enhanced Air
Russia could attack NATO territory within months, warned Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, saying the 'most important question' is whether Europe can rely on the US to come to its aid
LONDON -- NATO troops, vessels and aircraft took to the frigid North Atlantic Ocean last month to sharpen their skills for a potential future war at sea, whether in the tumultuous Atlantic or in waters closer to their hypothetical Russian adversaries.
Many of the Russian flights that NATO monitors with its Baltic air policing mission, in place since Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia joined the alliance in 2004, are to and from the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad.