Participating
aircraft include strategic bombers from both Belaya Air Base northwest of
Irkutsk in Siberia and from Olenya Air Base south of Murmansk on the Kola
Peninsula. Photos: Russian Ministry of Defense
Russia kicks off strategic aviation exercise over the
Barents Sea ahead of next week’s NATO Summit
A large area from the eastern Barents
Sea to the Ural Mountains is now closed off for civilian aviation as the
bombers will launch tactical missiles against on-ground training targets.
Read in Russian | Читать по-русски
By
Thomas Nilsen
July 05, 2023
The nuclear-capable bombers participating are flying
north from the Kola Peninsula and Siberia.
The exercise is simultaneously happening in the
Murmansk and Irkutsk regions, the Defense
Ministry states.
“Long range aviation crews will work out air patrols
in a given area, flight missions along the route in various meteorological
conditions, and they will also perform tactical launches of weapons towards
established targets at training ranges.”
The red-marked warning area
stretches nearly 1,000 km from west of Cap Kanin to east of Vorkuta in the Ural
Mountains. Also several areas near Murmansk is closed for civilian aviation in
the days ahead. Image by NotamMap.net
The Russian NOTAM-warning (Notice to Airmen) stretches
all east to the Pemboy test range near Vorkuta in the northern Urals. This
range is frequently used as targets during strategic nuclear forces drills in
northern regions, like last February when Vladimir Putin coordinated the
massive Grom [Russian for Tunder] exercise, involving all three legs of Russia’s
nuclear triad, plus cruise missiles.
The cross-Arctic nuclear show-off took place a few
days ahead of Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine.
In its statement on Wednesday, the
Defense Ministry does not details which weapons, cruise missiles, are to be
tested from the strategic bombers.
In the West, military experts are not jumping to
conclusions that Russia’s exercise is anything worthy of concern. For now at
least.
“Whether this is a long-planned routine exercise or a
symbolic demonstration of force ahead of NATO’s summit in Vilnius, is hard to
say. It could well be a combination,” says Kristian Åtland, senior researcher
at the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment.
The NATO
Summit in Vilnius next week is expected to agree on new
deterrence, shape the alliance’s response to potential attacks and debate how
best to help Ukraine.
The NATO Summit takes place in
Vilnius, Lithuania on July 11-12. The hashtag is already in place outside the
Defense Ministry’s building. Photo:
Thomas Nilsen
Not
aimed at Summit
“The Russian authorities have been keen to highlight
in the official statement that this exercise takes place according to their
combat training plan schedule. Given that most of the key decisions are
probably already agreed among allies, this may suggest that the exercise is not
specifically aimed at the NATO summit. Still, it carries a signal aimed at NATO
in general,” says professor Katarzyna Zysk, an expert on the Russian military
at the Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies.
She adds that Russia indeed constantly makes sure NATO
leaders remember the nuclear potential and escalation potential. “This in an
attempt to influence the allies’ decisions regarding Ukraine,” Zysk
says.
The professor underlines it is important to remember
that the Arctic region plays an important part in the Russian nuclear
strategy, including as a pathway for strategic bombers and with airfields that
can be used for their dispersal in crisis and conflict.
“The region itself has maintained its importance to
Moscow for many reasons, including because of an increased threat perception
and sense of vulnerability deriving from Russia’s growing conventional
weaknesses, depleted resources, and increased tensions with the West,”
Katarzyna Zysk says.
It was last fall Russian long-range aviation
forces started to move Tu-95
and Tu-160 bombers north to the Olenya Air Base (Olenegorsk-2) on
the Kola Peninsula. Since May this year, all aprons along the runway were
occupied by Russia’s largest and heaviest combat aircraft, the Barents Observer reported. Over the last
few months, the aircraft has led many waves of missile attacks on
civilian targets in Ukraine.
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