German Air Force Eurofighter Typhoons intercepted a Russian Su-24MR tactical reconnaissance aircraft near Latvian territorial waters on Saturday (June 1st).
The incident was reported by the Team Luftwaffe, which shared photos on social media.
The Su-24MR, a special reconnaissance variant of the Su-24 tactical bomber, was identified without a flight plan or radio communication. These aircraft are capable of all-weather operations and are equipped with sophisticated electronic warfare and surveillance systems.
The interception was conducted from Lielvārde Air Base in Latvia, part of NATO’s Baltic Air Policing mission.
Since Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, NATO has intensified its air policing missions over the Baltic states. Germany, participating in these missions since 2005, has annually contributed to the Reinforced Air Policing Baltic States for at least four months with a joint deployment contingent, including flying units and support forces.
The NATO Baltic Air Policing mission, operational since 2004, ensures the integrity of the airspace over Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, which lack the resources to patrol their skies independently. This mission serves as a collective and defensive peacetime measure, highlighting NATO’s commitment to the security of its member states.
Standard operating procedure is the Russian plane leaves and is escorted out when intercepted. This happens all the time.
How is that a deterrent from doing it again?
They should be brought down, arrested and interrogated, plane inspected, surveillance data taken, then demand explanations from russia.If they don’t comply when told to land - shoot them down. That’s what Turkey did and they no longer have this issue. russia only understands brute force.EDIT: Someone just pointed out they didn’t breach the airspace this time.
EDIT 2: Lemmy’s strike-through formatting isn’t working?
EDIT 3: Working now, separate strikes for each line.
Don’t ask me, I just know they’ve been doing it this way since the cold war.
Don’t think you can break the strikethrough with a line space.
That was it 🤦🏻♂️, thanks.
Could be that in the old days before gps they didn’t want to get into a spat about where the border was in open ocean, so they adopted the escort out idea which has continued since.
There was a passenger airliner that was shot out of the sky by the USSR because the pilots failed at navigating.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_Air_Lines_Flight_007