Russian flotilla, with advanced attack submarine,
cruises north of Japan
By
Keishi Koja
Stars and Stripes • November
12, 2024
Russia’s most advanced submarine was spotted for the first time in waters near Japan, the country’s military announced Monday.
A Yasen-class
nuclear-powered submarine accompanied by a flotilla of Russian vessels passed
through the Soya Strait, a 27-mile-wide international waterway that separates
Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido and Russia’s Sakhalin Island, according to
a Joint Staff news release. The transit happened around 8 a.m. Monday.
The submarine and
three other vessels — an Udaloy-class frigate, a Marshal Nedelin-class tracking
ship and a Baklazhan-class rescue tug — were seen about 50 miles northeast of
Cape Soya heading west, the release said.
The Japan Maritime
Self-Defense Force dispatched a P-3C aircraft from Fleet Air Wing 2 to surveil
the group, according to the release.
“It was the very
first time that the Maritime Self-Defense Force confirmed a Yasen-class
nuclear-powered submarine,” the release said.
Russian military
ships and planes have ramped up their activity near Japan in recent months.
A Russian IL-38
reconnaissance plane entered Japanese airspace three times on Sept. 23,
prompting Tokyo to scramble fighter jets to intercept and ultimately warn off
the aircraft with flares.
On Sept. 12, a
pair of Russian Tu-142 patrol planes circled Japan’s four main islands for the
first time in five years. They flew a route that spanned from Okinawa in the
south to Hokkaido in the north, the Joint Staff said at the time.
On Sept. 1, two
Russian navy corvettes were spotted 19 miles north of Cape Soya heading west,
according to USNI News on Sept. 6.
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