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Russia Restores Soviet -Era Strategic Bomber Patrols

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  • Russia Restores Soviet -Era Strategic Bomber Patrols

    RUSSIA RESTORES SOVIET-ERA STRATEGIC BOMBER PATROLS

    AZG Armenian Daily #149
    21/08/2007

    International

    On August 17, President Vladimir Putin said Russia permanently resumed
    long-distance patrol flights of strategic bombers, which were suspended
    in 1992 after the collapse of the Soviet Union, RIA Novosti informed.

    "I made a decision to restore flights of Russian strategic bombers
    on a permanent basis, and at 00:00 today, August 17, 14 strategic
    bombers, support aircraft and aerial tankers were deployed. Combat
    duty has begun, involving 20 aircraft." The president, speaking on
    the final day of large-scale military exercises involving Russia,
    China, and four Central Asian countries in the south Urals, said
    that on the first day of patrol flights, bomber planes would spend
    about 20 hours in the air, with midair refueling, and would interact
    with naval forces. "Air patrol areas will include zones of commercial
    shipping and economic activity. As of today, combat patrolling will
    be on a permanent basis. It has a strategic character," Putin said.

    The president said that although the country stopped strategic flights
    to remote regions in 1992, "Unfortunately, not everyone followed
    our example."

    Other states' long-distance strategic patrol flights have created
    certain problems for national security, he said.

    A former Russian Air Force chief said the resumption of patrols would
    strengthen Russia's defense capability. "It's a good thing that the
    old geopolitical setup has been revised. It used to be based on the
    principle, 'No one is going to attack us.' Practice testifies to the
    contrary," Army Gen.

    Pyotr Deinekin said.

    He highlighted the new potential security threats Russia faces,
    saying NATO fighters were based in the Baltic States - formerly part
    of the Soviet Union and now EU members - while radar stations are
    being built around Russia's borders.

    The general said that the early 1980s, in response to the U.S.'s
    deployment of cruise missiles in Europe, Soviet strategic aviation
    started patrolling areas as far a field as the U.S. coast. Patrols
    were discontinued following the collapse of the USSR and the Warsaw
    Pact, and due to severe economic difficulties, including an acute
    fuel shortage.

    "Flights will be conducted on the same basis as they were in the past,"
    Deinekin said.
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