Russian bombers have penetrated US airspace 16 times in the last TEN days. At the same time, Russia's Navy says it chased a submarine out of its 'boundary waters' in the Barents Sea, near the home of its powerful .
This is a huge spike in the number of such events – which have since Russia invaded Crimea last February.
It is really amazing how much tensions have increased among major powers over the last year, and…
A spokesman for the Russian Navy was by Interfax saying:
"An anti-submarine attack group and an Ilyushin Il-38 anti-submarine aircraft were sent to the said area to search and track the sub. The Northern Fleet anti-submarine forces' active maneuvers expelled the submarine from the Russian Federation's boundary waters."
It was an American fast attack nuclear submarine, which is as capable of spying as it is hunting other submarines, or lobbing Tomahawk cruise missiles.
Although the cat and mouse game between American and Russian submarines is nothing new, reporting on it by Russian officials is, and this event happened in the same area where another from Russian forces. So what exactly is Russia doing in that part of the world that has suddenly sent our surveillance assets running and why are they suddenly so interested in privacy?
An American spy plane, listening out for signals intelligence high above international waters in…
The sheer number of Russian bombers and surveillance aircraft operating near American territory is clearly a sign of a new strategy being executed by Putin's more aggressive Russia. Whether these missions are being conducted to lure America into a false sense of familiarity with such operations, or they are being executed as a form of pure power projection, bordering on harassment, remains unclear.
Yet sixteen flights in ten days is an extreme number ever for Russia's stated goals of heightened readiness or for information gathering purposes.