Russia sends long-range bombers near U.S.
By Greg Botelho and Faith Karimi, CNN updated 2:29 PM EST, Thu November 13, 2014
US RAPTOR TAILING RUSSIAN TU142 "BEAR" |
(CNN) -- Russia plans to send
long-range bombers to the Gulf of Mexico in what appears to be Moscow's latest
provocative maneuver in its increasingly frosty relations with the West. Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu said Wednesday
that "we have to maintain (Russia's) military presence in the western
Atlantic and eastern Pacific, as well as the Caribbean and the Gulf of
Mexico" -- including sending bombers "as part of the drills."
Shoigu added that Russia will also boost its security in Crimea, the region it
annexed from Ukraine earlier this year. "In
many respects, this is connected with the situation in Ukraine, with
fomentation of anti-Russian moods on the part of NATO and reinforcement of
foreign military presence next to our border," Shoigu said.
It's also true, of course, that
Ukraine sits some 6,000 miles from the Gulf of Mexico. But the fact the
situation there is being used as justification for military moves elsewhere
speaks to the broader implications stemming from the tensions between Russia
and the West, particularly the United States.
The plans come after Shoigu said Russia will expand its presence in the
Arctic region, which would seemingly affect Alaska and northern Canada. This
includes full radar coverage of that region by year's end, leaving Russia ready
"to meet unwanted guests" both from the north and east by 2015,
Shoigu said, according to a state-run TASS news agency report.
"We don't see the security
environment as warranting such activity," spokeswoman Jen Psaki told
reporters. "We don't think there is a current situation in the western
Atlantic and eastern Pacific or the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico that
warrants additional flights in out-of-area territory."
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