Two pairs of Russian Tupolev Tu-95 bombers approached the U.S. West
Coast on Saturday, forcing the Air Force to scramble fighter jets to
intercept the war planes before they breached the U.S. airspace, Fox
News reported
Monday. The Russian bombers were capable of carrying nuclear weapons,
but North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), which identified
the planes, did not indicate whether they were armed.
The first pair of Tupolev Tu-95 bombers was detected at 10:30 a.m.
EDT off the coast of Alaska when NORAD scrambled two F-22 jets to
intercept the Russian long-range strategic bombers. The second incident
occurred at 11:00 a.m. EDT off the central coast of California, and two
F-15 jets were scrambled from an undisclosed location, Fox News
reported, citing two senior U.S. defense officials.
“These are not unprecedented flights, but we are postured to respond
whether Alaska or California,” Michael Kucharek, a spokesman for NORAD,
told Fox News. “At no time did the bombers enter North American
sovereign airspace.”
Although the Russian bombers did not breach the U.S. airspace, the
presence of the planes off the West Coast is deemed threatening amid
increasing tensions between Moscow and Washington.
“It’s becoming very obvious that Putin is testing [Barack] Obama and
his national security team,” retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Thomas
McInerney, a former Alaska commander for NORAD, told
the Washington Free Beacon. “These long-range aviation excursions are
duplicating exercises I experienced during the height of the Cold War
when I commanded the Alaska NORAD region.”
Meanwhile, Sputnik News reported,
citing the Russian Ministry of Defense, that all flights conducted by
the country’s air force are routine, and in compliance with
international agreements.
On Saturday, two Russian bombers were also reportedly
spotted east of the big Swedish island of Gotland. The Swedish Armed
Forces, which subsequently scrambled two fighter jets to monitor the
bombers’ activities, said that the planes did not violate Swedish
airspace.
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