There are currently seven or
eight Russian “Notice to Aviation” (NOTAM) areas in and over the Barents and
Kara Seas, which is more than usual for this time of year. Illustration:
NotamMap / Barents Observer
Russia steps up military posturing in the Arctic ahead of NATO’s
nuclear drill
The week ahead will not be an easy sleep
for security observers. Numerous military watchouts in Russia's northwestern
regions.
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By
Thomas Nilsen
October 16, 2022
“Judging by the contents of the
NOTAM messages and the corresponding PRIPs (Russian navigational warnings), at
least some of the temporarily restricted areas are related to planned or
ongoing weapon testing or live-fire training events,” said Kristian
Åtland, Senior Research Fellow at the Norwegian Defence Research
Establishment (FFI).
He noted
that there are more warning areas up north than usual for this time of the
year.
Several of
the warning areas are in the waters between Norway’s Finnmark region and the
Svalbard archipelago. Others are in the eastern Barents Sea and in the
southeast Kara Sea.
·
One area north of the Varanger Peninsula, impact
area for Russian missiles, from October 18 to 21.
·
One area southeast of Bear Island, impact area for Russian
missiles, from October 18 to 21.
·
Unspecified danger area is located in waters from north
of Kildin island to north of the Fishermen Peninsula, October 18 to 21.
·
Unspecified danger in southeast Kara Sea, October 17 to 22.
This is a highly unusual area for navy activity, both in location and
size.
·
Two long unspecified areas west of Novaya Zemlya, October 18 to
19.
·
An area between Bear Island and the Edge Island of the Svalbard
archipelago is an impact area for Russian rocket fragments, October 14 to
17.
The impact
area for Russian rocket northeast of Bear Island could very well be fragments
from the Angara rocket launched from Plesetsk cosmodrome on Saturday, October
14. The Defense
Ministry in Moscow said the rocket brought the military
spacecraft Kosmos-2560 into orbit.
There are
also several NOTAM warnings onshore on the Kola Peninsula used
for artillery training and cruise missile impact areas in the
Komi Republic.
Nuclear NATO
NATO will
on Monday, October 17, kick-off its nuclear deterrence exercise “Steadfast Noon”.
Main area for the drill will be over northwestern Europe and will involve over 60
aircraft, including the long-range B-52 strategic bombers.
“This is
routine training, which happens every year,” Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg
said at a press briefing ahead
of next week’s NATO defense ministers meeting.
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“We are closely monitoring Russia’s nuclear forces,” Stoltenberg
continued and underlined: “We have not seen any changes in Russia’s
posture.”
“President
Putin’s veiled nuclear threats are dangerous and irresponsible. Russia knows
that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought,” Jens Stoltenberg
said.
The NATO
exercise hosted by Belgium will not carry live munition and will partly take
place over the North Sea between Norway, Denmark and United Kingdom.
Russia
nuclear
The
Kremlin has not pre-announced any upcoming nuclear exercise. However, a White
House spokesperson said it could come this month.
“We expect
Russia to conduct its annual strategic nuclear exercise, they call it GROM, as
early as this month,” National Security Council coordinator Johan
Kirby told reporters on Thursday.
If so,
that would be the second GROM [Thunder] nuclear strategic exercise this
year.
The first took place in
February, only days before Russia’s massive onslaught on Ukraine,
and included all three legs of the nuclear triad, plus navy-launched cruise
missiles. As previously reported by the Barents Observer,
the Northern Fleet frigate “Admiral Gorshkov” during the
exercise fired a Tsirkon hypersonic cruise missile from the Norwegian sector of
the Barents Sea.
In August and
September, Russia’s strategic forces moved several of its
long-ranged Tu-95 and Tu-160 bombers north to the air base Olenegorsk-2
on the Kola Peninsula.
Katarzyna
Zysk, a professor of international relations at the Norwegian Institute for
Defence Studies, told the Barents Observer that sending such heavy bombers
north “is certainly signaling.”
It is “not
necessarily connected to the war in Ukraine,” she added, underlining the
important role of the Arctic in Russia’s nuclear deterrence.
Inherently
dangerous
Nuclear
weapons expert Hans M. Kristensen with the Federation of American Scientists
recently warned that coinciding nuclear exercises in the middle of a
large-scale war like the one in Ukraine are inherently dangerous because they
can fuel further escalations.
“It’s a
textbook example of what happens in a tense crisis where both sides escalate to
demonstrate that they are serious about deterring each other, but therefore
can’t de-escalate because it would make them look weak,” Kristensen wrote
in a blog post on U.S. - Russian relationship.
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