NATO back on the hunt for Russian submarines in the Arctic
By Vasco
Cotovio and Frederik Pleitgen, CNN
Updated 1740 GMT (0140 HKT) October 25, 2018
US Marines train in Iceland ahead of NATO's Trident Juncture exercises.
Reykjavik, Iceland (CNN)In a far-flung
corner of Iceland's main international airport, a once-raging strand of the
Cold War is being rekindled -- NATO's hunting of Russian submarines.
"They're
letting us know that they're out there," Adm. James G. Foggo III,
commander of US Naval Forces in Europe, said of Russia's increased submarine
presence in the North Atlantic and Arctic oceans.
"They're
operating in much greater numbers and in places they have not operated
before."
And NATO is keen
to respond and send its own message back. Thursday, the alliance begins
its Trident Juncture exercise,
a so-called Article 5 exercise that tests the readiness of NATO allies to
restore the sovereignty of one of its members -- in this case, Norway -- after
an act of aggression.
It will be NATO's
largest exercise in decades, involving 50,000 troops, 10,000 vehicles, 250
aircraft and 65 vessels, including a US aircraft carrier operating north of the
Arctic Circle for the first time in almost 30 years.
Tensions between
Russia and the West are at highs not seen since the Cold War, amid the
poisoning of former Russian intelligence agent Sergei Skripal in England,
allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 US election and Western
sanctions on Moscow following its annexation of Crimea.
But Foggo, who is
overseeing Trident Juncture, said the exercise isn't a threat to Russia, noting
that NATO and Russian troops will be more than 700 kilometers (435 miles) apart
during the maneuvers. NATO, he added, had invited Russian and Belarusian
observers to monitor the exercise.
"I want them
to be there because that conveys the strength of the alliance," Foggo
said.
As the exercise
plays out, it will involve air, ground and maritime operations, including
anti-submarine warfare.
Admiral James G.
Foggo III addresses service personnel on the USS Iwo Jima ambibious assault
ship ahead of training exercises in Iceland.
Russia not yet NATO's equal
Foggo said he believes
Russia has over 40 combat submarines, more than 20 concentrated in its Northern
Fleet, capable of operating in the North Atlantic and the Arctic.
To keep track of
the Russian subs, NATO planes are making a flight about every other day out of
a revived US base at Keflavik International Airport.
Iceland's foreign
minister, Thór Thórdarson, said in a speech in Stockholm in January that
alliance aircraft are operating out of the country with increased frequency,
taking off from Keflavik for a total of 153
days in 2017, a steady year-on-year increase from just 21 days in 2014.
Established in
1951, the US Naval Air Station in Iceland was deactivated in 2006, as NATO
shifted its focus in Europe south to the Mediterranean. However, the threat
posed by a resurgent Russia and its submarine fleet has worried US military
commanders and brought the Americans back to this island nation, which sits
between Greenland and the United Kingdom.
To get from bases
in the Russian Arctic to the open Atlantic, Moscow's submarines need to pass
Iceland.
Foggo says those
subs are a big headache for NATO's leaders.
"The Russians
have continued to invest in research and development and production of very
capable submarines. They have been our most capable adversary," said the
US admiral, who spoke with CNN in an exclusive interview.
Russia says its
sub fleet is defensive and necessary to safeguard the country's security.
At this year's
"Submariner Day" in March, Vice Adm. Oleg Burtsev, the former head of
Russian naval forces, talked about the importance of beefing up the country's
fleet of subs.
"This is
because the plans of the leadership of our country and our army are to ensure
that we are capable of worthily countering any probable enemy from all
directions," Burtsev said, according to Russia's Tass news agency.
And another former
top naval commander said Russia has some work to do to match the submarine
fleet the NATO allies can muster.
"I believe
that the qualitative level of our fleet is quite high now, but its quantity is
not yet enough," Adm. Vladimir Komoyedov, the former head of Russia's
Black Sea Fleet, told Tass.
Much of NATO's
trouble with the Russian sub fleet is of its own making, said Carl Schuster, a
former US Navy captain and current Hawaii Pacific University professor.
"Much of (the
Russian sub fleet's) current threat is based on the expansion of its operations
and operating areas at a time when NATO countries have reduced their fleets and
fleet operations," Schuster said, calling it "a serious threat only
because NATO ignored it until recently to focus on other security
concerns."
A US Navy P-8
Poseidon surveillance and submarine aircraft sits at Keflavik International
Airport ahead of NATO exercises.
A new generation of threat
Foggo says
Russia's new generation of submarines is highly capable and dangerous. Among
the newest is the Borei class: virtually silent, nuclear-powered vessels
capable of launching ballistic missiles. The Borei class is a main pillar of
Russia's underwater nuclear deterrent force, similar to the US Ohio class
ballistic missile submarines.
"This is
beyond any doubt the future of our group of naval strategic nuclear
forces," the head of Russia's naval forces, Adm. Vladimir Korolev, said
recently at the christening of another new Borei class submarine.
Russia currently
has four of these on active duty, with four more expected to enter
service by 2020.
(https://sputniknews.com/military/20120730174865317/)
But Russia is also
in the process of modernizing many of its older submarines, like the
diesel-electric Kilo class boats. These can now stay under water longer and are
capable of carrying four cruise missiles, which they successfully fired at ISIS
targets in Syria, the Russian military says.
"They carry
the Kalibr cruise missile, a very capable weapon system. And from any of the
places the Russians operate from, they can target any capital in Europe," Foggo
said.
"Would they
do it? I don't think so, but nevertheless, we need to be cognizant of where
they are at all times," he said.
Schuster said that
worry gives Russia an advantage.
"Moscow 's
aggressive actions and intent will determine the time and place of a crisis
while Western nations must be present and ready to respond at all times,"
he said.
And that's why
NATO is methodically ramping up operations in Iceland.
US Marines train
in Iceland ahead of NATO's Trident Juncture exercise.
Chess in the ocean
The US is spending
$34 million to upgrade facilities at Keflavik, which will enable the Navy to
deploy its P-8 Poseidon surveillance and anti-submarine aircraft more
frequently.
But even with the
twin-engine jets running regular surveillance in the North Atlantic, finding
Russian submarines is not an easy task.
"The ocean is
big .... It's a chess match between the sub commander and all the assets that
are trying to find him," Lt. Cmdr. Rick Dorsey, the tactical coordinator
for one of the US P-8 units operating out of Iceland, told CNN. "It's a
combination of a lot of work, from a lot of different units."
"We work with
ships, we work with other aircraft, we work with other nations to help get the
picture," Dorsey said.
It's the sort of
team work among allies that Adm. Foggo wants to encourage, applauding the UK
and Norway for acquiring their own P-8 aircraft and calling on NATO members to
invest in research and development to keep a competitive edge over Russia.
"We must continue challenging them wherever they are and knowing where
they are," he said.
"We can no
longer take for granted that we can sail with impunity in all of the
oceans."
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