NORAD intercepts Russian and Chinese aircraft near Alaska – Washington Examiner

The ⁤North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) recently intercepted four military aircraft—two Russian TU-95 bombers and two Chinese H-6 bombers—operating together in international airspace near Alaska. U.S. and Canadian aircraft were involved in the interception, though NORAD clarified that the foreign planes did not violate U.S. or Canadian airspace. NORAD does not consider these aircraft a threat, but it continues to monitor foreign military ‍activities near North America, which is‌ a common occurrence. A visual⁤ from⁤ a Russian Air Force aircraft captured the intercept ​alongside U.S. and Canadian military jets.


NORAD intercepts Russian and Chinese aircraft operating together near Alaska

The North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) tracked and intercepted a combination of Chinese and Russian aircraft operating near Alaska on Wednesday.

U.S. and Canadian aircraft intercepted the two Russian TU-95 and two Chinese H-6 military aircraft operating in international airspace, NORAD said in a statement. The foreign aircraft did not enter U.S. or Canadian sovereign airspace.

NORAD also noted that it did not view the aircraft “as a threat,” though they will continue to monitor foreign activity near North America. It’s not uncommon for Russian aircraft to fly into Alaska‘s Air Defense Identification Zone (AZID), which is where sovereign airspace ends and is a defined stretch of international airspace that requires aircraft to readily identify itself in the interest of national security.

The Russian Ministry of Defense said on Telegram it and the People’s Liberation Army, the Chinese military, carried out an air patrol over the Chukchi Sea, Bering Sea waters, and the northern part of the Pacific Ocean.

The aircraft involved in the exercise, which lasted more than five hours, obeyed international law and did not violate the airspace of any foreign country, according to the ministry.

In March, the head of U.S. Northern Command, Gen. Gregory Guillot, warned that China has a “willingness and a desire” to “act up there.”

“We have seen them in the maritime,” he told the Senate Armed Services Committee at the time. “We have seen them under the cloud of a technical or scientific research, but we think it is certainly multi-mission, to include military. And then I expect to see air activity in the Alaska part of the Arctic as soon as this year, potentially. It is a very big concern of mine.”



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