Nato intercepts
Russian planes '10 times in a day'
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3 hours ago
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captionThis file
pic shows a Russian Tu-95 bomber of the type that Nato said had flown near the
Norwegian coast
Nato planes were
scrambled 10 times in a six-hour period on Monday in response to an
"unusual peak" of Russian flights in several areas, the Western
military alliance said on Tuesday.
They intercepted planes near alliance airspace in the North Atlantic, North
Sea, Baltic and Black Sea, Nato said.
There was no immediate response from Russia, which recently accused Nato of
following a path of confrontation.
Nato's secretary general has urged Moscow to resume dialogue.
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Jens Stoltenberg's call last week was backed up by US Secretary of State
Antony Blinken, on a visit to the alliance's headquarters in Brussels, when he
proposed a "relationship with Russia that is at least predictable and
stable".
According to Nato, while the Russian military aircraft never entered its
member states' airspace they did not transmit transponder codes so posed a
potential risk to civilian flights. The alliance said the interceptions
involved six groups of Russian planes:
·
Norwegian F-16s scrambled as two Tu-95 Bears neared the Norwegian coast
·
The Russian planes then flew south over the North Sea prompting action from
UK and Belgian air force planes
·
Two Tu-160 Blackjack bombers were later intercepted by the Norwegian air
force
·
Allied planes also tracked three Russian planes over the Black Sea
·
A Russian maritime patrol plane was intercepted by Italian planes over the
Baltic Sea near Kaliningrad.
Relations between Moscow and Nato deteriorated in 2014 when Russia seized
Crimea from Ukraine and Russian-backed rebels took over areas of eastern
Ukraine.
They have been further strained by a dispute over the Nord Stream 2 gas
pipeline from Russia to Germany which is opposed by the US. Mr Blinken has
warned that any companies involved in the project risk US sanctions.
Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg called last week for Russia to
resume dialogue in the form of the Nato-Russia Council, which has not met since
2019. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko said Nato was unable to
get rid of the habit of seeing Russia as a "threat from the East".
Meanwhile, a 2020 ceasefire in Ukraine, which is not a member of Nato, has
come under strain with both sides blaming each other for the rise in violence.
Ukraine's commander in chief, Ruslan Khomchak, has accused Russia of waging an
"aggressive policy" and sending Russian troops close to Ukrainian
borders.
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