Wednesday, January 26, 2022

Russia Orders Warships Into Black Sea, Fighter Jets Take Off For Belarus

Russia orders warships into Black Sea (VIDEO)
RT


A fleet of more than 20 Russian warships and support vessels has set sail for exercises in the Black Sea amid rising tensions with NATO in Eastern Europe.

The Ministry of Defense in Moscow confirmed on Wednesday that the taskforce, which includes frigates, missile boats, minesweepers and amphibious assault vessels, had left the ports of Sevastopol and Novorossiysk on the country's southern coast.

The ships will practice maneuvering and repelling aerial attacks, among other combat skills, officials have confirmed.

A video published by military chiefs shows two of the navy's newest vessels taking part, including the frigate Admiral Essen, which joined the fleet in 2016, and the corvette Ingushetia, which embarked on its maiden voyage in 2019.

The drill takes place at the same time as maneuvers by Russia’s Northern Fleet in the Barents Sea, against a backdrop of heightened tensions between Russia and NATO over the border with Ukraine. Moscow has been seeking written assurances that Kiev will be barred from joining the US-led bloc. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has said the demands are unacceptable but expressed hope that the two sides can find a way to de-escalate the current situation.

The bloc’s own exercises, named Neptune Strike 2022, kicked off in the Mediterranean on Monday. Ships from the USS Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group are taking part in the drill.

NATO earlier announced that it will deploy additional forces to the Baltic Sea region, closer to Russia’s borders, in response to claims that Moscow could be set to order military action against Kiev. Russian officials have consistently denied the allegations and accuse Western states of inflaming the crisis.



WATCH Russian fighter jets take off for Belarus

RT


Russia is sending advanced Su-35 fighter planes to neighboring Belarus to participate in scheduled military exercises amid rising tensions with NATO, Moscow’s Ministry of Defense has said.

Military chiefs announced the redeployment in a statement on Wednesday, writing, “the crews of the multipurpose Su-35S fighters of the eastern military region… continue to rebase to Belarusian airfields. During their flights, the crews are making intermittent stops at the airfields of the central and western military regions, to rest and prepare for the next takeoff.”

After they arrive in Belarus, the planes will take part in exercises designed to test the readiness of the combined anti-air defense system of Russia and Belarus, who are close military partners. The large-scale drills will also involve ground troops and are scheduled to last until February 20.

The Sukhoi Su-35 is a single-seat, twin-engine air-defense fighter of a type first developed in the Soviet Union, when it was known as the Su-27M. It was renamed the Su-35 after the dissolution of the USSR, and in 2008, a modernized version with a redesigned cockpit and weapons-control systems made its first flight. The aircraft has been exported to several other nations, including China and Egypt.

On Friday, the Ministry of Defense announced that it was moving two divisions of its S-400 Triumph air-defense systems, designed to take down enemy warplanes, into Belarus for the exercises.


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The Russian fleet in the Mediterranean Sea will need a NATO member Turkey's permission to transit the Turkish Straits in order to reach the Black Sea.