Moscow: Russia has
dismissed criticism that its jets 'aggressively' buzzed a US warship in the
Baltic Sea and said its pilots had observed all the required safety measures.
The Russian defense ministry today
said its Su-24 planes were conducting test flights and claimed the USS Donald
Cook was in 'operational proximity of the Russian navy's Baltic fleet base' as
the reason for the flypast.
The ministry said its aircraft
observed the ship and then 'turned away in observance of all safety measures'.
On Tuesday evening the Russian
planes thundered over the US destroyer at a height of just 30ft in what a
military official branded the most 'aggressive' incident between Russia and the
United States in years.
The 'simulated attack' maneuver saw
the jets pass so close to the ocean that they created a 'wake in the water',
the defense official said.
The shock move came as a Polish
helicopter was taking off from the US warship on Tuesday evening.
The maneuver was followed by seven passes by a Russian KA-27 Helix helicopter - designed to take out submarines - taking pictures of the US vessel.
The American warship was conducting
air operations about 70 nautical miles from the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad
when the aircraft flew at an 'unsafe' speed close to the Destroyer.
Two close encounters occurred on
Tuesday night in international waters, while another, at an acceptable
distance, happened on Sunday.
'This is more aggressive than
anything we've seen in some time,' the defense official said, on condition of
anonymity.
The planes were 'wings clean', meaning they were not visibly armed.
A Polish helicopter, which was
operating off the ship as part of routine training, had its flight operations
disrupted because of the Russian actions.
The US warship had been followed by
a Russian intelligence-gathering vessel before the incident with the attack
aircraft.
Crew on USS Cook had contacted
sailors on the Russian ship to reassure them they were conducting routine
operations.
While there are often encounters
between US ships and foreign aircraft, this time officials and crew deemed the
movements of the Russian jets unsafe, due to their speed and proximity to the
ship.
The White House issued a statement
condemning Russia for the latest in a series of 'concerning' clashes between
the Russian and U.S. militaries.
'This incident is entirely
inconsistent with the professional norms of militaries operating in proximity
to each other in international waters and international airspace,' Press
Secretary Josh Earnest said.
'There have been repeated incidents
over the last year where the Russian military, including Russian military aircraft,
have come close enough to each other or have come close enough to other air and
sea traffic to raise serious safety concerns, and we continue to be concerned
about this behavior.'
The incident came as NATO plans its
biggest build-up in eastern Europe since the Cold War to counter what the
alliance, and in particular the Baltic states and Poland, consider to be a more
aggressive Russia.
The three Baltic states - Estonia,
Lithuania and Latvia - which joined both NATO and the European Union in 2004,
have asked NATO for a permanent presence of battalion-sized deployments of
allied troops in each of their territories. A NATO battalion typically consists
of 300 to 800 troops.
Moscow denies any intention to
attack the Baltic states, which were part of the former Soviet Union.
USS Cook has spent much of the last two years in Europe, following its deployment to the Black Sea in 2014 after Russia's annexation of Crimea.
While it was stationed there, it was
buzzed 12 times by two Russian Su-24s in a remarkably similar incident to the
one on Tuesday.
'The Donald Cook is more than
capable of defending itself against two Su-24s,' the Pentagon said at the time.
The US Navy often runs routine
training missions through the Baltic Sea, passing through international waters
and those controlled by NATO members.
It holds a huge annual drill known
as BALTOPS, which sees other allies send ships to the region for what it calls
routine exercises but are seen by military experts as a show of force.
BALTOPS 2015 saw more than 5,000
units from the U.S., the UK, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Finland,
France, Germany, Georgia, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland,
Sweden and Turkey conduct operations in the Baltic Sea, and off the coasts of
Sweden and Germany.
Tensions with Russia were further
raised earlier this year when the U.S. announced plans to station six F-15
aircraft in Finland and artillery in Norway, with both nations sharing a border
with Russia.
The US already has fighter planes
based in the UK, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Iceland and the Netherlands.
Daily Mail


কোন মন্তব্য নেই:
একটি মন্তব্য পোস্ট করুন