An Air Force U-2 has this week been on mission to
northern airspace as part of a joint Norwegian, U.S., British
training. MASTER SGT. ROSE REYNOLDS
The
secretive U-2 spy plane on mission up north as Norway steps up deterrence
against Russia
The U-2 Dragon Lady is back in Norwegian airspace,
nearly 65 years after the shot down incident over the Urals in the Soviet Union
of a similar plane on its way to Bodø airport.
5 December 2024
- 08:20
The exercise this week, aimed to deter Russia,
includes fighter jets, strategic bombers, tankers and the grand old Cold War
surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft: the U-2.
U-2 has been to Norway before. Bodø airport north
of the Arctic Circle served the U.S. spy planes that in the late 1950s flew
missions over the Soviet Union. On May 1st 1960, however, a Soviet
anti-aircraft missile hit the plane as it flew over Mayak, the secretive plutonium
production facility north of Chelyabinsk in the South Urals. The pilot, Francis
Powers, ejected and parachuted safely to the ground where he was arrested by
KGB and spent two years in jail before being exchanged in a spy-swap.
Although very old, the high-altitude spy plane
still fills a critical role in combat collections of signals to other ground
and airborne units.
“The training shows which ability the Norwegian
armed forces have to integrate and utilise groundbreaking capabilities provided
by the United Kingdom and the USA in joint operations,” says Tron Strand, Chief
of Norway’s Joint Headquaters at Reitan near Bodø.
The most visible part of this week’s exercise came
when two of the U.S. Air Force B-52 strategic bombers on Wednesday flew low
over Bergen.
The training scenario was not to attack Russia,
but to simulate attacks on enemy occupied territories inside Norway.
The three countries train together to detect,
track and degrade an imaginary enemy target on allied territory, the Norwegian
Armed Forces explains in a statement.
"In Ukraine, Russian air defense has proven
to be effective, and Ukrainian air forces lack freedom of action," says
head of the Norwegian fighter jets, Morten Hanche.
In a war scenario, the Norwegian Armed Forces want
to retain the room for action that Ukraine has lost.
"The Bomber Task Force with F-35, naval and
ground forces is not easy to defend against. Together we are good at doing that
job," explains Hanche.
Chief of the Norwegian F-35 fighter jets Morten
Hanche. Photo: Norwegian Armed Forces
Hanche says it is a goal in itself to let the
enemy see how good Norway and its allied forces are on working together.
"Then they will hopefully understand that it
is not a good idea to attack us," Morten Hanche says.
British Eurofighter Typhoons along with Norwegian
and British F-35 fighter jets worked together with the P-8 Poseidon maritime
surveillance aircraft and the much larger U.S. B-52 bombers on Wednesday.
Also a RC-135 Rivet Joint reconnaissance plane was
active above Norway at the time.
“Interoperability is essential for the defense of
NATO’s northern flank. The exercise demonstrates the strengths of our alliance:
our ability to understand how we operate, to share critical information
quickly, and to work seamlessly together,” says Captain Hannah Bishop, Chief of
operational planning with the British Air Force.
Earlier this autumn, both a U.S. and a British
aircraft carrier were exercising outside the coast of Norway, including in
waters near Lofoten archipelago inside the Arctic Circle.
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