Monday, January 9, 2017

Close Calls Between U.S. And Russian Jets Over Syria

A Russian Su-35 Flanker fighter shadows U.S. F-15s as they refuel over Syria in September. The photo, taken by a camera on one of the American planes, shows the Russian pilot far closer than the three-mile safety limit set in a 2015 U.S.-Russian agreement. PHOTO: U.S. AIR FORCE

Wall Street Journal: U.S. Pilots See Close Calls With Russian Jets Over Syria

As planes share crowded airspace fighting parallel wars, militaries struggle to minimize threat of an accident

One night this past fall, a U.S. radar plane flying a routine pattern over Syria picked up a signal from an incoming Russian fighter jet.

The American crew radioed repeated warnings on a frequency universally used for distress signals. The Russian pilot didn’t respond.

Instead, as the U.S. plane began a wide sweep to the south, the Russian fighter, an advanced Su-35 Flanker, turned north and east across the American plane’s nose, churned up a wave of turbulent air in its path and briefly disrupted its sensitive electronics.

“We assessed that guy to be within one-eighth of a mile—a few hundred feet away—and unaware of it,” said U.S. Air Force Col. Paul Birch, commander of the 380th Expeditionary Operations Group, a unit based in the Persian Gulf.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: The skies above Syria are an international incident waiting to happen .... I am just surprised that the ultimate serious incident has not happened yet (i.e. jets firing at each other) between Russian and U.S. aircraft.

1 comment:

mlacix said...

This photo is so high quality, zoom on the camera must not have been used, definitely, yeah. Thanks to the blackout of the details it's impossible to tell the distance, it could be anything.