Archive for the U.S.A. Category

Russia Resumes International Bomber Flights; U.S. Yawns

Posted in Russian, U.S.A., World War III, bombers, flights, hysteria, international on August 18, 2007 by accidentalrussophile

Omigod, omigod, this is scary! The Russians are coming, the Russians are coming (insert hysteria here).

This could be World War III!

Or not.

Russia has been for some time now conducting flights over international waters and recently Vladimir Putin announced that long-range bomber flights would continue for the foreseeable future.

“We proceed from the assumption that our partners will view the resumption of flights of Russia’s strategic aviation with understanding.

“In 1992, the Russian Federation unilaterally ended the flights of its strategic aviation in faraway areas patrolled by the military,” Putin said. “Unfortunately, not everyone followed our example, and strategic aviation flights by other states continue. This causes certain problems for guaranteeing the safety of the Russian Federation.”

Blah, blah blah. But what does it all mean, Basil?

Not a heck of a lot, Austin. From the AFP article on the topic, the U.S. just shrugs it off as Russia dusting off some old bombers.

“If Russia feels as though they want to take some of these old aircraft out of mothballs and get them flying again that’s their decision,” State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said.

“That is a decision for them to take; it’s interesting,” McCormack added.

“We certainly are not in the kind of posture we were with what used to be the Soviet Union. It’s a different era,” McCormack said.

And the truth is, Russia has been doing this for a while and is only now making announcements and headlines with it.

“Over the last few months the Russian air force has been flying a little bit more than we’ve seen in the past; certainly they’re ranging farther than they have in the more recent past,” Renuart said in a statement.

“NORAD has intercepted them out over international waters, near Alaska, and the command continues to monitor all of their long range bomber flight activity, even today,” he added.

The sorts of missions that Russia has been undertaking with these bomber runs are practice missions including navigation exercises and mid-air refueling. You know – the sort of stuff that the U.S. Air Force does every single day of the week. (I live under the flight path of the former Pease Air Base where refueling tankers are stationed. Trust me. They are flying and filling military planes that fly over international waters in the North Atlantic. Every. Single. Day.

You can expect more Russian shows of their military capability in the months ahead, as they are obviously seeking to portray themselves as being in a position of strength for any renegotiation of arms deals, such as the CFE Treaty.

Update: A Washington Times article, actually a reprint of a UK Telegraph article) on this topic has a few quotes of interest:

Unnamed former White House Staffer:

“They were slow to see that these people are still players. My great fear is that I wake up one day soon to discover that we lost the Cold War, or rather that, like everything else, we won the war and then lost the peace.”

Unnamed source, close to Condoleeza Rice:

“She wants to spend more time on Russia, but that hasn’t always been possible. She said to me that she regrets the fact that she has not done enough on what is, after all, her major area of expertise.”

From Alex Pravda, a Russia specialist at London’s Chatham House:

“(Putin) believes in fighting for your place in the sun, and he is on record as saying that nobody appreciates weakness,” he said. “They are not looking for the imperial reach of the Soviet era. What they want is an international presence.”

I love how the premise of such pieces falls apart when you examine the actually facts and quotes. The Washington Times article tries to make the case that Russia has been largely ignored by the U.S. and has taken offense at that. While I think the U.S. citizenry has pretty much ignored Russia, I find that our government has been actually very aggressive towards Russia and Russian interests.

If ignoring Russia means, pushing Russia aside and taking over what used to be their sphere of influence, then sure – the U.S. has been ignoring Russia. But to the Russian side, it sure appears to be a soft war of international politics and foreign policy being waged by the United States.

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Russian Bombers Visit Guam; Smiles Exchanged

Posted in Guam, Russia, SCO, Tu-95, U.S.A., bombers on August 9, 2007 by accidentalrussophile

The BBC is reporting that two Tu-95 turboprops made a 13-hour flight to Guam earlier this week, home to a large U.S. military base, for a brief visit.

Russian general Pavel Androsov offered the following statement, regarding the bomber sojourn:

“It has always been the tradition of our long-range aviation to fly far into the ocean, to meet [US] aircraft carriers and greet [US pilots] visually,”

“Yesterday [Wednesday] we revived this tradition, and two of our young crews paid a visit to the area of the base of Guam,”

“I think the result was good. We met our colleagues – fighter jet pilots from [US] aircraft carriers. We exchanged smiles and returned home.”

From Interfax, we have Assistant to the Air Force Commander Col. Alexander Drobyshevsky making the following statements:

“All flights by our strategic bombers were made in accordance with international rules. The airplanes flew over neutral waters, never approaching foreign air borders.”

Also from the Interfax report, an excited Long Range Aviation Commander, Maj. Gen. Pavel Androsov said:

“Can you imagine this: taking off in Blagoveshchensk, 13 hours of flight, a flight over neutral waters where our airplanes met with their NATO colleagues, ship-borne fighters, an exchange of smiles. The mission has been successfully completed”

The flights are part of a larger pattern of more expansive Russian military operations in recent weeks, according to BBC diplomatic correspondent Jonathan Marcus. This is possibly or even likely part of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization meetings and war games and meeting in Kyrgyzstan this month.

The United States is conducting its own training operations or war games, called “Valiant Shield” in the area of Guam. It is one of largest U.S. military exercises held anywhere in the world, and involves over 22,000 troops, 30 ships, and 275 planes.

A report from the Washington Post quotes Navy Admiral Robert F. Willard as saying that the Tu-95 bombers never came within even 300 miles of Guam:

“U.S. planes went to an orbit point in preparation for an intercept that never occurred because the Bears didn’t get close enough,”

The Tu-95 (NATO designation “Bear”) was developed during the Cold War in the 1950’s as an intercontinental bomber and was originally intended to drop nuclear weapons. In recent years they have been modified for other roles such as patrols and even as a civilian airliner.

UPDATE: Spook86 of “In From the Cold” blog discusses the recenPublish Postt bomber flights, their Cold War history, and speculates on a return to Tu-95 missions that pass the United States east coast.

UPDATE 2: Vladimir Putin has indicated that Russian long-range flights and missions will resume from this date forward. The flights are cited as being necessary due to perceived military threats from “other states”, a supposed allusion to the U.S.

At least one outrageous bigot on the web is calling this “instigating WW III” – perhaps one of the most entirely stupid things I’ve ever seen in print. Then again, some people actually believe the Weekly World News.

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Washington Post on Growing Anti-Americanism in Russia

Posted in Levada, Russia, U.S.A., Washington Post on August 5, 2007 by accidentalrussophile

Quick link and reference to an article in the Washington Post, which seems to be getting some commentary in the blogosphere.

The problem with the article, in my opinion, is that it draws the wrong conclusions. Or maybe it is better said that it starts with some pre-formed conclusions and attempts to mold the data to those presumptions. Sarah E. Mendelson and Theodore P. Gerber indicate that Kremlin policies and rhetoric towards the U.S. are negatively affecting public opinions in Russia.

However, I would state that prior Levada Center polls have shown that Russians have a growing dislike of the United States well before many of the Kremlin’s most pointed criticisms of the United States in recent months. Suggesting that the Kremlin created these attitudes is putting the cart before the horse.

It seems rather ignorant to presume that the Kremlin doesn’t notice the public opinions and moods of citizens within Russia, and pander towards the people to some extent. Why should they be any different than the government and politicians within the United States? It also seems foolish to think that Russians can only form an opinion based upon what their government is telling them. Russians have ample opportunity to read what the world is saying. The Kremlin certainly didn’t write the script for NATO expansion in Central and Eastern Europe; bombings in the former Yugoslavia, the war in Iraq; foreign-funded NGO’s involvement in revolutions in Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, and Ukraine; placement of ballistic missile interceptors in Poland; and any number of other U.S. policies which appear aggressive and hostile to Russian eyes.

Why would anyone imagine that Russians would form positive opinions about these foreign policy actions by the United States?

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