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US and Canada monitor 4 Russian military planes near Alaska.

U.S. and Canadian forces tracked⁢ four Russian military aircraft through Alaska’s air defense identification zone (ADIZ)‌ on Aug. 13 ⁤and ⁢14.

Alaska’s ADIZ is not part of U.S. airspace ‌proper, but the‍ zone immediately⁣ surrounding it in which aircraft ​are‍ identified and tracked in the interest of ⁤national security.

The ​North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), a joint U.S.-Canada⁤ military⁢ organization that oversees North American ‌airspace and its defense, said the ⁣incident was ‍routine and⁤ did not present a military threat to the⁣ denizens of North America.

“This Russian activity ‍in the Alaska⁣ ADIZ ​occurs regularly and‍ is not seen ⁤as a⁣ threat,” a‍ press ‌statement said.

Russian ⁤military aircraft have been probing North American airspace since ⁢the ⁢late 2000s. Such ​missions frequently draw out U.S. and Canadian air ‍assets, which escort the Russian planes away from allied⁤ airspace.

NORAD did not⁣ specify whether it had sent aircraft to intercept the Russian planes, but in a ⁢ nearly identical scenario in February, the organization sent in two F-16s and two F-35s to ⁣monitor and escort Russian military aircraft⁣ in the ADIZ. Another ⁣intercept occurred in ⁤May.

“Since Russia resumed out-of-area Long Range Aviation activity in 2007, NORAD has seen⁤ a yearly average of approximately six to seven intercepts of Russian⁣ military aircraft in the ADIZ,” a NORAD statement said in ⁤February.

“These numbers have varied‌ each year from as high as 15​ to as low as zero.”

Tensions High Amid Increased ‌US Vigilance

The United States’ responses to possible threats in⁣ and‌ near its airspace have come under heightened scrutiny since U.S. forces shot ⁤down four objects flying ⁣above U.S. and Canadian ⁤airspace in February and March.

Those objects included a ⁤Chinese spy balloon and three unidentified objects, which may have been civilian hobby balloons. The incidents marked ​a historic⁤ moment for NORAD, which in its 65-year history had never before shot down‌ an ‍aerial object over ​North America.

Those incidents were not handled without problem, however. NORAD forces apparently failed​ to detect ⁣one of the objects until it had⁢ already⁤ entered U.S. airspace. It failed again‌ to track and engage‌ another‍ object that ⁣lingered⁢ near sensitive U.S. nuclear silos in Montana before it‍ was rediscovered and shot down over Lake Huron.

NORAD’s‍ statement to the ​Russian mission⁣ near Alaska this week reaffirmed that‌ the ⁤organization maintains​ a robust defense for tracking and⁢ engaging with potentially hostile aircraft.

“NORAD employs a layered defense⁢ network of satellites, ground-based and airborne ⁢radars, and⁢ fighter⁢ aircraft ⁤to track aircraft and inform appropriate actions,”⁣ the statement said.

“NORAD remains ready to employ a number of ⁣response​ options⁣ in defense of North America.”

Russia, China⁢ Increasing Presence‍ in North American Waters

Monday’s incident comes amid a⁤ renewed campaign by Russian leadership to rally its few de facto ⁤allies against the⁤ United States and the international order that ⁤it leads.

Warships from a joint China–Russia naval operation ‍cruised near the coast of Alaska last week in what has been described as the largest combined ⁤Russian–Chinese battle group⁣ to ever approach U.S. ‌shores.

Russian President⁤ Vladimir Putin ⁢and Chinese Communist Party ​leader Xi Jinping ​first declared a “no limits” partnership in February ​2022, weeks⁤ before Russia launched its attempted ‌conquest of Ukraine. That partnership⁢ has deepened significantly ​since then, and ​experts now believe that political​ leadership in Moscow and Beijing believe themselves to ​be in⁣ a joint ‌struggle against‍ U.S.⁣ hegemony on a global scale.

To that⁣ end, the‍ two leaders met earlier‍ in the year in Moscow,⁤ where they pledged to reshape the international​ order to their interests. Putin said at the time that China and Russia⁢ would ‌create a more just “multipolar world order” ⁢to ⁣replace ​the ⁢“rules” ⁤of⁣ the current ‌international order.

Russia and Iran also continue to​ ink new defense ‍agreements. Iran is providing Russia with hundreds of suicide drones for use ⁢in Ukraine, while Russia, in turn, is selling the ‌Islamist regime fifth-generation fighter jets and​ other‌ advanced capabilities.

Sino–Iranian agreements⁣ have also begun to proliferate,⁤ with Beijing ⁤allegedly‍ going so far as to conspire to deliver parts for weapons of mass destruction to Tehran.

Now, China, Iran, and​ Russia are working together ‍across the diplomatic, economic, and military ​domains, as well as in each of their respective​ regions. That effort⁢ is ⁢designed to break up‍ U.S. influence abroad, according to Jonathan Lord, ⁢a senior fellow at the Center for‌ a New American⁢ Security think tank.

“We ​see​ it on a strategic level,” Mr.⁢ Lord⁢ said during a


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