Another US spy plane buzzed by Russian jet over Baltic
Another US spy plane buzzed by Russian jet over Baltic Sat Apr 30, 2016 12:40Am
"....The incident happened on
April 29, when the Russian fighter came within about 30 meters (100
feet) of the American plane and performed a “barrel roll” over it, CNN
reported Friday, citing two US military officials in the Baltic Sea
region..."
A Russian Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker (file photo)
A US RC-135 reconnaissance
aircraft has been buzzed by a Russian Sukhoi Su-27 over the Baltic Sea,
the latest encounter in a series of similar incidents between the two
countries’ military forces.
The incident happened on
April 29, when the Russian fighter came within about 30 meters (100
feet) of the American plane and performed a “barrel roll” over it, CNN
reported Friday, citing two US military officials in the Baltic Sea
region.
"This unsafe and unprofessional air intercept has the
potential to cause serious harm and injury to all aircrews involved,"
Pentagon spokesman Commander Bill Urban said in a statement.
"More
importantly, the unsafe and unprofessional actions of a single pilot
have the potential to unnecessarily escalate tensions between
countries," he added. A US RC-135 spy plane (AFP photo)Urban noted that Washington is concerned by such moves as they “raise serious safety concerns.”
This is while on Thursday, a Russian Mig-31 supersonic jet intercepted a US Navy P-8 spy aircraft over Russia’s Far East.
The
Soviet-era Mig-31, which is known as the world’s fastest supersonic
jet, flew within 50 feet of the P-8, performing maneuvers that Commander
Dave Benham, a spokesman for the US Pacific Command, said were “safe
and professional.”
Tensions between Russian and American military
forces surged earlier this month after two Russian Sukhoi Su-24
warplanes performed “simulated attack” passes over the USS Donald Cook
destroyer in the Baltic Sea.
Describing the move as one of the
most aggressive acts in recent memory, American officials said the
Russian bombers were flying so close that they caused "wakes in the
water."
Russia has accused the US of intimidation by sailing the
Cook close to Russia's border in the Baltic, warning that the Russian
military would respond to any future incidents.
The US-led NATO
military alliance has been deploying more troops and equipment to the
Baltic States-- Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania-- to counter what the
alliance calls “Russian aggression.”
The Baltic nations, which
joined NATO in 2004, have asked the military alliance for a permanent
presence of battalion-sized deployments of its troops in each of their
territories, although Moscow denies any intention to attack the Baltic
States.