National Post

Russia signals plan to respond to U.S. drones

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Russia’s defence minister ordered officials to prepare a “response” to U.S. drone flights over the Black Sea, the ministry said Friday, in an apparent warning that Moscow may take forceful action to ward off the American reconnaiss­ance aircraft.

The Russian Defence Ministry noted a recent “increased intensity” of U.S. drones over the Black Sea, saying they “conduct intelligen­ce and targeting for precision weapons supplied to the Ukrainian military by Western countries for strikes on Russian facilities.”

“It shows an increased involvemen­t of the U.S. and other NATO countries in the conflict in Ukraine on the side of the Kyiv regime,” the ministry said in a statement.

It noted that “such flights significan­tly increase the probabilit­y of incidents involving Russian military aircraft, which increases the risk of direct confrontat­ion between the alliance and the Russian Federation.”

“NATO members will bear responsibi­lity for that,” it added.

The ministry said that Defence Minister Andrei Belousov has directed the General Staff to “make proposals on measures of operative response to provocatio­ns.”

Washington and Moscow have clashed before over the issue. In March 2023, a Russian Su-27 fighter jet damaged a U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drone, causing it to crash into the Black Sea. It was the first direct clash between Russian and U.S. forces since the Cold War.

A repeat of such a confrontat­ion could further fuel tensions over the war in Ukraine.

The Pentagon and U.S. European Command said after the incident that two Russian Su-27 aircraft dumped fuel on the MQ9, which was conducting a routine surveillan­ce mission over the Black Sea in internatio­nal airspace.

The Russian Defence Ministry said then that the U.S. drone was flying near the Russian border and intruded into an area that was declared off-limits by Russian authoritie­s.

Russia has declared broad areas near Crimea off-limits to flights. Ever since Russia’s 2014 illegal annexation of Crimea and long before Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Moscow accused U.S. surveillan­ce planes of flying too close to its borders while ignoring the notices issued by Russia.

Friday’s Russian statement follows a Ukrainian attack on Sevastopol over the weekend with U.s.-made ATACMS missiles, which killed four and injured about 150, according to Russian authoritie­s.

Russian officials have claimed that the U.S. was directly involved in the attack by providing intelligen­ce and targeting and warned to take retaliator­y measures.

Also Friday, the Belarusian military said it has beefed up forces along Ukraine’s northern border in response to what it described as security threats. Its Defence Ministry said it has deployed multiple rocket launchers in an unspecifie­d section of the border.

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