The largest area with
aviation danger warning, issued for February 16-19, stretches into Norwegian
Exclusive Economic Zone in the Barents Sea North of the Varanger Peninsula.
Screenshot from Notammap.net
Russia activates aviation
danger alert north of Norway in days of high tensions
More or less the entire southeastern Barents Sea
is affected by military activity from February 16 to 19.
By
February 13, 2022
Russian aviation authorities on Sunday announced NOTAM (Notice to Airmen) warnings for the week ahead,
with closure of an area from the Kolguyev Island in the east to several
tens of nautical miles west of the maritime delimitation line with Norway, a
distance of about 650 kilometers.
Only a narrow shipping lane
corridor along the coast of the Kola Peninsula is kept open.
In addition to alerting civilian
aviation, the Port Administration of northwestern Russia in Murmansk has issued coastal
warnings (PRIPs) for seafarers in areas all as far into the Norwegian
Exclusive Economic Zone as 23°W. That is west of North Cape where the
Barents Sea meets the Norwegian Sea.
Also this warning is activated for the
period February 16 to 19.
The alert is marked with “Rocket
launches” and is valid
from 7 am to 1 pm, which is the timing with daylight so far north this time of
the year. Other coastal warnings for the week ahead are published for areas in
the eastern Barents Sea and the White Sea.
“We are aware of the NOTAM warning. It is
notified via the established channels for international aviation,” says
spokesperson for the Norwegian Armed Forces, Preben Aursand, in a phone
interview with the Barents Observer.
While there are very few direct military contact lines between NATO states and Moscow, the Norwegian Join Headquarters near Bodø maintains regular Skype talks with the Russian Northern Fleet’s Headquarters in Severomorsk.
Aursand says no information about the
upcoming activity is this time given directly via the military-to-military
channel.
Preben Aursand is spokesperson for the Norwegian Armed Forces.
“The warnings are in international waters
and Russia is in its full right. But we expect that they will assure safety in
the area.”
Aursand will not speculate on what sort of
military rocket launchings will take place. “We will monitor the
activities,” he says.
Normally, when a civilian space rocket with
satellites is launched from Plesetsk in a northwestern direction towards orbit,
a much smaller danger zone is activated north of the Kola Peninsula, and
possibly further into the Arctic north of Svalbard.
The enormous size of the military alert for
the Barents- and White Seas could be an indication that long-range missiles are
to be launched. Previously when testing the naval hypersonic Tsirkon cruise
missiles, waters both south and north of the Kola Peninsula have been closed off for civilian
aviation and shipping.
Another possibility is testing of one or
several ballistic nuclear missiles from submarines, or even a full-scale
exercise for the triad of nuclear forces with launchings of ballistic missiles
from both subs, the Plesetsk cosmodrome south of Arkhangelsk, and nuclear
cruise missiles from launched strategic bombers.
Last time Russia carried out a massive nuclear forces exercise was the Grom-19 in October 2019, a drill led by
President Putin.
One of the NOTAM warnings is for a spot
at 83°N northwest of Novaya Zemlya in the Arctic Ocean, a typical location
where the second stage of a ballistic missile on its way to the Far East of
Russia will fall down.
Russia’s closure of the Barents Sea comes
amid tensions over Ukraine as both Moscow and Western officials push for
diplomatic solutions.
This weekend, Washington and several
European capitals told citizens to leave Ukraine. Also, embassy staff from
many countries in Kyiv are told to leave.
On Friday, Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden
talked on phone in an attempt to de-escalate tensions. The call between the two
presidents was “professional and substantive”, but there was “no fundamental
change in the dynamic” according to a release from the White House.
Norway’s Prime Minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, recently underlined that “a new war in Europe will have
consequences for our relationship with Russia, also in the North.”
He quickly added that the conflict must
“move into a political track,” and that Norway will “continue to work for
a good and cooperative neighborly relationship with Russia.”
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