The British jets intercepted seven Russian military aircraft

Nunez Report

Britain’s Ministry of Defence said this week it had scrambled Typhoon fighter jets after four separate groups of aircraft were detected in international airspace near the Baltics by NATO air defenses. The British jets intercepted seven Russian military aircraft that, as Reuters reportsdid not file a flight plan and did not use their transponders, making them invisible to civilian air traffic control and a safety hazard to commercial air traffic. “The Russian aircraft were monitored by the RAF Typhoons and escorted on their way,” noted the ministry. This follows an event last Thursday when Latvia said NATO fighters had scrambled a record four times after a total of 16 Russian military planes were spotted close to the country’s air space.  

As Reuters reports,

Britain said on Wednesday it had scrambled Typhoon fighter jets to intercept seven Russian military aircraft flying near the Baltic states, as tensions between the West and Russia over Ukraine remained high.
A NATO official said the Russian aircraft were armed and in the vicinity of NATO airspace.
They did not file a flight plan and did not use their transponders, making them invisible to civilian air traffic control and a safety hazard to commercial air traffic, which was why NATO had intercepted them, he said.
Britain’s Ministry of Defence said on Wednesday it had launched the Typhoons on Tuesday after four separate groups of aircraft were detected in international airspace near the Baltics by NATO air defences.
It said the aircraft had been identified as a Russian Tupolev Tu-22 bomber, four Sukhoi Su-27 fighters, one Beriev A-50 early warning aircraft, and an Antonov An-26 transport aircraft.
They appeared to be carrying out routine training, it said.
“The Russian aircraft were monitored by the RAF Typhoons and escorted on their way,” the ministry said in a statement.

NATO has been building its forces ever since the troubles began…

The alliance last month tripled the number of fighter jets based in the Baltics as part of measures to beef up its defences in eastern Europe following Russia’s annexation of Crimea. Britain contributed four Typhoons to the operation.

And this is not the first time…

NATO planes patrolling the Baltics have scrambled repeatedly in the last week in response to sightings of Russian military aircraft.
Last Thursday, Latvia said NATO fighters had scrambled a record four times after a total of 16 Russian military planes were spotted close to the country’s air space.
Local news agency BNS quoted Latvia’s Prime Minister Laimdota Straujuma on Monday as saying that the increased activity by Russian military planes was an “intimidation tactic” and a demonstration of power by Russia. “The same tactics are used also in Ukraine and elsewhere,” she said.
The incidents may have been connected to military exercises in Russia’s Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad that Moscow said last week it was holding in response to drills by NATO allies in parts of eastern Europe.

But with stocks at record highs (and expected volatility at record lows), we are sure this is nothing to worry about – go back to the World Cup.

Credit to Zero Hedge

http://nunezreport.blogspot.com/2014/06/the-british-jets-intercepted-seven.html

4 thoughts on “The British jets intercepted seven Russian military aircraft

  1. Now let’s see…..”did not file a flight plan and did not use their transponders, making them invisible to civilian air traffic control”

    But yet “four separate groups of aircraft were detected in international airspace near the Baltics by NATO air defenses”

    Hmmmmm…the Russians are having a military exercise right now….and they did stay in their own territory….

    Drums of war??

  2. Weren’t they flying off the coast of the U.S. a week or two ago? First the U.S. and now Britain. Russia seems to be trying to intimidate the West.

  3. “The British jets intercepted seven Russian military aircraft…”

    Define “intercepted”. Because what they did doesn’t fit the dictionary definition of intercept(ed).

    in·ter·cept
    [v. in-ter-sept; n. in-ter-sept] Show IPA
    verb (used with object)
    1.
    to take, seize, or halt (someone or something on the way from one place to another); cut off from an intended destination: to intercept a messenger.

    “The Russian aircraft were monitored…”

    Oh, they were MONITORED…

    “…by the RAF Typhoons and escorted on their way,” noted the ministry.”

    And ESCORTED. Which means they continued on with the flight plan they already had, and you had ZERO effect on their mission, in other words.

    How the hell does that translate to “intercepted”?

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