Jump to content

Russia Crashes U.S. Drill With Sub-Hunting Planes


Casino67

Recommended Posts

russia-crashes-u-s-drill-with-sub-hunting-planes
Wired.com:

Soviet_Il-38_May_passing_low_over_USS_Midway_CV-41-660x5161.jpg


The United States and Japan were all set for a day of joint naval practice yesterday when two very uninvited and disruptive guests showed up: Russian sub-hunting planes.

The U.S. and Japanese navies were in the Sea of Japan for their biennial Keen Sword exercises in the largest U.S.-Japan defense drill to date when two Il-38 Anti-Submarine Warfare planes buzzed the assembled warships, forcing the U.S. to scramble F-15s to intercept them. The exercise was briefly postponed in order to prevent the Russian sub-hunters from snooping on the naval operations.

Russia defended its actions, saying the planes were operating legally in international waters. It’s nonetheless annoying for the U.S. and Japan — and that may be the point.

The U.S. has been beefing up military ties with East Asian partners in the wake of increasing North Korean aggression, sending the U.S.S. George Washington to drill with South Korea and inviting South Korean officers on hand to observe Keen Sword. So its fairly clear that the exercise isn’t aimed at intimidating Russia,though it dates to the cold war.

But the Russians might not exactly see it that way. Over the last month, Russian and Japanese politicians have made dueling visits to islands claimed by both countries. Russia’s interruption of the exercise was likely intended as a reminder that it still feels a bit strongly about its claims to the disputed islands.

Trolling rivals with military aircraft has been a favorite tactic for Russia to remind folks its still a force to be reckoned with, despite its economic troubles during the 1990s. In recent years, it has buzzed U.S. aircraft carriers and the borders of its NATO rivals with bombers and fighter jets. Russia even went for a retro Cuban missile crisis effect by threatening to send Tu-160 supersonic bombers to Cuba if the United States didn’t drop its plans for a missile shield in Eastern Europe.

But it seems like everybody wants to show their muscles in seas of East Asia these days, from China, to the U.S. to North Korea and now Russia and Japan. With all the activity, the waters in the region look they’re in danger of getting pretty warm soon.

Photo: An Il-38 buzzes the U.S.S. Midway, from Wikipedia
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The U.S. and Japanese navies were in the Sea of Japan for their biennial Keen Sword exercises in the largest U.S.-Japan defense drill to date when two Il-38 Anti-Submarine Warfare planes buzzed the assembled warships, forcing the U.S. to scramble F-15s to intercept them. The exercise was briefly postponed in order to prevent the Russian sub-hunters from snooping on the naval operations.

 

Hopefully they were intercepted a long way away. As I recall US Carrier Task Forces had a 300 mile bubble around them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The U.S. and Japanese navies were in the Sea of Japan for their biennial Keen Sword exercises in the largest U.S.-Japan defense drill to date when two Il-38 Anti-Submarine Warfare planes buzzed the assembled warships, forcing the U.S. to scramble F-15s to intercept them. The exercise was briefly postponed in order to prevent the Russian sub-hunters from snooping on the naval operations.

 

Hopefully they were intercepted a long way away. As I recall US Carrier Task Forces had a 300 mile bubble around them.

 

That made me wonder if the pic was photoshopped. They have a right to be there, but not that close, IMO.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ahhhh. Just like the good 'ol days. We need an opponent who wears a uniform.

 

Except for NK, I wonder if those days are over? Uniforms. Russia and China are the only two countries that would have a chance against our military. And NK the only one dumb enough to try. The only tactic left is terrorism.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The U.S. and Japanese navies were in the Sea of Japan for their biennial Keen Sword exercises in the largest U.S.-Japan defense drill to date when two Il-38 Anti-Submarine Warfare planes buzzed the assembled warships, forcing the U.S. to scramble F-15s to intercept them. The exercise was briefly postponed in order to prevent the Russian sub-hunters from snooping on the naval operations.

 

Hopefully they were intercepted a long way away. As I recall US Carrier Task Forces had a 300 mile bubble around them.

 

That made me wonder if the pic was photoshopped. They have a right to be there, but not that close, IMO.

The picture in the article is really old. That carrier is the USS Midway with F-4's on its deck. The picture is probably from the 70's. But it's legal for other aircraft to fly that close. Not a great idea, but legal. We do it to them.001.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • 1714404770
×
×
  • Create New...