WP har sakset dette fra "The Pentago
n Files". Nedskytingen avMQ-9 dronen var i internasjonalt luftrom, men innenfor det området russerne har etablert som fareområde. Utstrekningen finner jeg ikke på noe kart, men det må være noe der som RAF RC-135`en og droneoperatøren ikke har brydd seg om. Det likner litt på fareområdene russerne etablerte i norsk luftrom for en tid tilbake, gjentatte ganger omtalt her på bloggen. Kan de opptre på samme måte der?
Russia nearly shot down British spy plane near
Ukraine, leaked document says
The incident occurred
months before a Russian fighter collided with an American MQ-9 drone over the
Black Sea
By Dan Lamothe
April 9, 2023 at 11:56 a.m. EDT
A Russian fighter jet nearly shot down a British surveillance plane last year, according to a leaked U.S. military document circulating online, an incident more significant than was previously disclosed and that could have drawn the United States and its NATO allies directly into the Ukraine war.
The near miss occurred on Sept. 29 off the
coast of Crimea, the heavily
fortified Ukrainian peninsula that Russia
seized in 2014 and has used to base its Black Sea naval fleet and launch
attacks elsewhere in Ukraine.
The document, one of dozens in a
trove of leaked classified Pentagon documents that has triggered
a Justice Department investigation, refers to the incident as a “near-shoot down of UK RJ,” a reference to
the “Rivet Joint” moniker common for RC-135 reconnaissance planes. The aircraft
is used to collect radio transmissions and other electronic messages.
Intelligence leak exposes
U.S. spying on adversaries and allies
British Defense Minister Ben Wallace
disclosed the incident to Parliament’s House of Commons in October, saying that
two Russian Su-27 fighter jets had intercepted the RC-135 in international
airspace over the Black Sea, flying “recklessly,” with one plane coming within
15 feet of the British aircraft.
One of the
Russian jets “released a missile” at a distance, Wallace told lawmakers then —
but he did not describe the incident as a near-shootdown, attributed the
missile launch to a “technical malfunction” and said he had spoken with senior
Russian defense officials about it.
The incident highlights the balancing act
that Western military officials have sought to maintain as they attempt to aid
the Ukrainian military and collect information about the war without being
drawn directly into conflict with Moscow. Russian officials have sought to
portray NATO nations as aggressors, while the United States and its allies
have said they are supporting Ukraine but are not at war with Russia.
Under NATO’s treaty, if a member of the
military alliance is a victim of an armed attack, all members of the alliance
will consider it an attack and collectively respond.
U.S. defense
officials declined to comment about the contents of the leaked document, as
they have with other information in the trove that was found on apps including
Discord, Telegram and Twitter. An official with the British Embassy in
Washington also declined to comment, and the Russian Embassy did not respond to
a request for comment.
The document was printed with headers for
the Pentagon’s Joint Staff, and details surveillance flights over the Black Sea
from the day of the reported near-shootdown up to Feb. 26.
The document is labeled “SECRET/NOFORN,” a
classification that indicates it is not to be shared with non-U.S. citizens. It
details a number of other Russian reactions to surveillance flights by U.S.,
British and French aircraft between October and the end of February, including
one on Dec. 30 in which another British Rivet Joint, accompanied by two British
Typhoon fighter jets, was intercepted by Russian jets that came within 100
feet.
In another
instance, a U.S. MQ-9 surveillance drone was intercepted on Feb. 22, with
Russian aircraft coming within 100 feet. About two weeks later, on March 14,
two Russian Su-27 jets intercepted an American MQ-9, dumping fuel on the
unmanned aerial vehicle and eventually
colliding with it. The collision prompted U.S. personnel
remotely piloting the vehicle to down it in the Black Sea, about 56 miles off
the coast of Crimea, U.S. officials have said.
A map on the document shows a boundary
drawn over sections of the Black Sea to mark where surveillance planes may fly.
It appears to begin about 12 miles off the coast of Crimea, adhering to
international law. The map also includes a second line about 50 miles from the
shore labeled “SECDEF Directed Standoff,” indicating that Defense Secretary
Lloyd Austin may have ordered U.S. pilots to keep aircraft farther from the
peninsula.
Austin said in March that the United
States will continue to fly “wherever international law allows,” rejecting
Moscow’s claim to a self-declared exclusion zone over extended parts of the
Black Sea.
French and
British aircraft made crewed surveillance flights over the Black Sea
between Sept. 29 and Feb. 26, according to the document, while the Americans
relied on drones that include the RQ-4 Global Hawk, the RQ-170 Sentinel and the
MQ-9 Reaper. A handful of these flights occurred each month, the document said.
U.S. military officials have said they typically file public flight plans for
such flights.
Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, in March called Russian behavior in the downing of the MQ-9 in
March part of a pattern of aggressive acts toward the United States, Britain
and other nations.
“We have to figure out exactly what the way
ahead is,” he said at the time, speaking at a Pentagon news conference. He
characterized the behavior of Russian pilots as “very unprofessional and
unsafe.”
A Pentagon spokesman, Brig. Gen. Patrick
Ryder, said last month that it is important to keep the Black Sea and the skies
over it open to all nations.
“The Black Sea,” he said, “is a critical
international seaway supporting many of our NATO allies, including Romania,
Bulgaria and Turkey, and does not belong to any one country.”
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