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US Spy Plane Sweeps Russia's Western Flank
US Spy Plane Sweeps Russia's Western Flank

Newsweek

time6 days ago

  • Politics
  • Newsweek

US Spy Plane Sweeps Russia's Western Flank

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A U.S. spy plane has swept across NATO's northern flank—near major military bases in northwest Russia—flight tracking data shows, marking the latest flight by NATO surveillance aircraft close to Russian soil. A U.S. Air Force (USAF) RC-135V Rivet Joint aircraft took off from a base in eastern England on Tuesday for a roughly 12 hour flight, first traveling north over Norway before nearing Russia's Murmansk region, data from publicly available flight tracking platform FlightRadar24 shows. The aircraft reached the area northeast of the Russian town of Severomorsk before turning back and returning to the U.K. via Finland, the Baltic states that are pressed up against Russia, Poland, Germany and then the Netherlands. It skirts around Russia's exclave of Kaliningrad, a wedge of Russian soil squeezed between Lithuania and Poland, tracking data indicates. Russia's northwestern Murmansk region borders NATO member Finland, and is home to the country's formidable Northern Fleet. The Northern Fleet plays a major role in Russia's nuclear arsenal. An RC-135W Rivet Joint and two F-35 Lightnings fly over The Mall during a flypast to mark the 80th anniversary of VE Day in London, England, on May 5, 2025. An RC-135W Rivet Joint and two F-35 Lightnings fly over The Mall during a flypast to mark the 80th anniversary of VE Day in London, England, on May 5, has a number of military bases and airfields around the city of Murmansk and nearby Severomorsk, the home of the main Northern Fleet headquarters and a major submarine base. The Olenya airbase, hosting long-range Russian bombers, is north of Severomorsk, and Russia has in recent years modernized its Severomorsk-1 naval airbase. Gadzhiyevo, another major submarine base, sits north of Murmansk and Severomorsk. The U.S. and the U.K. have both operated Rivet Joint aircraft in eastern Europe in recent weeks. A British Royal Air Force (RAF) RC-135 flew an almost identical flight path through Europe up to Murmansk last week. The Boeing RC-135 aircraft hoovers up what is known as signals intelligence, or SIGINT, which can come from a variety of sources, like written messages or data from weapons and radar systems. Iterations of the RC-135 have been in use with the U.S. military for decades. The USAF Rivet Joint, identified on FlightRadar24 by the call sign, "JAKE 17," took off from the U.K. base of Mildenhall at 7 a.m. local time (2 a.m. ET) on Tuesday, and landed back at the same base at just after 7 p.m. U.K. time (2 p.m. ET). The USAF's fleet of RC-135s have been "hard pressed of late with urgent demands for SIGINT collection at U.S.-Mexico border, East Asia, eastern Europe, and the Middle East," Olli Suorsa, an assistant professor in homeland security at the government-owned Abu Dhabi-based Rabdan Academy, previously told Newsweek.

NATO Spy Planes Make Pincer Move Over Russia
NATO Spy Planes Make Pincer Move Over Russia

Newsweek

time15-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Newsweek

NATO Spy Planes Make Pincer Move Over Russia

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. American and British reconnaissance aircraft flew from England toward Russia, approaching the country from two sides on the same day, according to flight data. A Newsweek map shows the planes' route amid tensions between NATO and Moscow. On Monday, the Boeing Royal Air Force (RAF) aircraft RC-135W flew from its base in the U.K. and circled off the coast of the Russian city of Murmansk before heading back. It happened the same day as the U.S. Air Force (USAF) aircraft RC-135V left a different U.K. base and circled the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad that borders NATO's eastern flank members, Lithuania and Poland. There is no suggestion that Russian airspace was breached. Why It Matters The Boeing-built aircraft gather signals intelligence and are crewed by more than 30 people, including electronic warfare officers and intelligence operators. The latest sorties come amid growing tensions between Moscow and the bloc following Russian aircraft buzzing NATO airspace and pledges by the U.S. and the alliance to provide more military help for Ukraine to fight Russian President Vladimir Putin's aggression. What To Know Data from Flightradar24, mapped by Newsweek, shows that the RAF RC-135W took off from the RAF base at Waddington, Lincolnshire, England at 8:11 a.m. on Monday. The aircraft headed past Norway, Sweden and Finland before turning southeast toward Russia. Its route took it across the Barents Sea and almost parallel with Murmansk, Russia's Arctic port city, before it returned to the U.K. along the Scandinavian coast and landed at Waddington at 6:38 p.m. Also on Monday, the USAF RC-135V Rivet Joint, identified by the call sign "JAKE17," took off at 7:08 a.m. from Mildenhall, Suffolk, located further south in England. The aircraft went on a seven-hour flight that took it across the Netherlands, Germany, Poland and Lithuania before it circled Kaliningrad, the Russian exclave that would be the front line of any hostilities between Moscow and the alliance. This image from May 5 shows an RC-135W Rivet Joint and two F-35 Lightnings flying over The Mall during a flypast on Victory in Europe Day in London. This image from May 5 shows an RC-135W Rivet Joint and two F-35 Lightnings flying over The Mall during a flypast on Victory in Europe Day in days ago, the USAF reconnaissance and intelligence-gathering aircraft skirted around Kaliningrad after it crossed Europe and the three Baltic states. The Rivet Joint usually flies around NATO's eastern flank and also on the edge of the Black Sea near Russian-controlled Crimea, which Moscow seized from Ukraine in 2014. Olli Suorsa, an assistant professor in homeland security at the Rabdan Academy in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, previously told Newsweek that the USAF's fleet of RC-135s were "hard pressed of late" because of demands for signals intelligence collection at the U.S.-Mexico border, East Asia, Eastern Europe and the Middle East. The U.K.'s RAF operates its own Rivet Joint fleet, often sending its reconnaissance aircraft around Kaliningrad and the broader eastern flank of NATO. At the end of last month, the aircraft traveled to and from the Black Sea after circling Kaliningrad. What People Are Saying User @MeNMyRC1, a security analyst, wrote on X, formerly Twitter, next to the map of the RAF RC-135W: "All the way up into the Barents Sea. This area used to get a lot more attention when the Soviet Union had a Navy and Air Force." What Happens Next NATO continues to conduct regular aerial surveillance of Russia's western border regions, and Russia is likely to continue facing accusations that it is buzzing alliance airspace as part of hybrid measures that add to security concerns for the region known as the "NATO lake."

Map Shows Where US Spy Planes Are in West Pacific
Map Shows Where US Spy Planes Are in West Pacific

Newsweek

time09-07-2025

  • Newsweek

Map Shows Where US Spy Planes Are in West Pacific

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A Newsweek map tracks the deployments of three United States spy planes in the western Pacific, as the Pentagon continues to monitor its main rival, China, in the contested region. The U.S. Pacific Air Forces (PACAF) previously told Newsweek that its fleet of spy aircraft were conducting what it called "planned, routine operations" in the Indo-Pacific region. Newsweek has reached out to the Chinese Defense Ministry for comment via email. Why It Matters The U.S. Air Force operates various types of reconnaissance aircraft for different missions—such as collecting signals and detecting nuclear explosions. The American spy plane fleet is often deployed overseas to allied countries, including Japan, the U.K. and Qatar. China, which is rapidly expanding its military, is a major spying target for the United States. Beijing has protested Washington over what it calls "close-in reconnaissance" near China's coastline, which has occasionally led to dangerous encounters between aircraft. What To Know Using tracking data from Flightradar24, which displays Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), a Newsweek map shows a U.S. RC-135W Rivet Joint aircraft arrived at Royal Australian Air Force Base Edinburgh in South Australia from its home base, Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska, on July 3. A United States RC-135W Rivet Joint aircraft lands at Royal Australian Air Force Base Edinburgh in South Australia on July 3, 2025. A United States RC-135W Rivet Joint aircraft lands at Royal Australian Air Force Base Edinburgh in South Australia on July 3, 2025. Tech. Sgt. Chris Thornbury/U.S. Air Force In photos released on Tuesday, the U.S. Air Force confirmed the Rivet Joint's deployment, revealing that it was part of Exercise Talon Shield—a test of the force generation model that involves sending a unit from its home to another location to support "downrange operations." The Rivet Joint is capable of detecting, identifying and geolocating electromagnetic signals, providing "near real-time on-scene intelligence collection, analysis, and dissemination." On Monday, a U.S. RC-135S Cobra Ball aircraft—deployed at Kadena Air Base on Japan's Okinawa Island—was tracked flying over the Philippine Sea near Japan's southwestern islands. The Cobra Ball can collect optical and electronic data on ballistic targets. It remains unclear whether the Cobra Ball was monitoring Chinese missile tests. The following day, a U.S. RC-135V Rivet Joint aircraft was spotted departing from Kadena Air Base—a U.S. airpower hub in the western Pacific—and flying into the South China Sea, where China, the Philippines, and other countries have overlapping territorial claims. Following its South China Sea mission, however, the aircraft was tracked diverting to Yokota Air Base near Tokyo for unknown reasons, after circling over Kadena Air Base, according to MeNMyRC, an open-source intelligence analyst on X (formerly Twitter). What People Are Saying The U.S. Pacific Air Forces previously told Newsweek: "PACAF remains committed to a free and open Indo-Pacific focused on fostering regional security and stability throughout the region." Mao Ning, spokesperson for China's Foreign Ministry, said at a press conference in February 2023: "U.S. aircraft and warships frequently conduct close-in reconnaissance around China, which seriously threatens China's national security and undermines regional peace and stability. The Chinese side has repeatedly voiced our grave concerns. The U.S. needs to put an immediate end to such provocations." What Happens Next The U.S. military is expected to continue deploying spy aircraft in the western Pacific amid China's growing military presence. It remains to be seen whether U.S. and Chinese aircraft will be involved in "unsafe and unprofessional" encounters.

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