US F-22 stealth fighter jets intercept Russian patrol aircraft near Alaska
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The U.S. military scrambled F-22 stealth fighter jets to intercept a pair of Russian patrol aircraft flying near Alaska Wednesday, the commander of NORAD said on “Fox & Friends”.
“We’re ready 24/7,” on alert for these missions, Air Force Gen. Terrence O’Shaughnessy said.
“The Russian [IL-38] aircraft were intercepted in the Bering Sea, north of the Aleutian Islands, and did not enter United States or Canadian sovereign airspace,” NORAD said in a statement.
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The IL-38 is a long-range maritime reconnaissance aircraft used to hunt for American submarines.
The Russian planes flew within 50 miles off the coast of Alaska, Gen. O’Shaughnessy said.
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“Our crews are ready,” the general added. “We are always ready to defend our great country.”
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Asked by Fox & Friends host Brian Kilmeade why the Russians would fly a mission so close to the United States during the novel coronavirus outbreak, O’Shaughnessy replied, “They wanted to see if we are able to react.”
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Three weeks ago, the Russians flew a similar mission near Alaska while the Navy was conducting an arctic training mission with two submarines.
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The U.S. military routinely flies reconnaissance aircraft, fighter jets and bombers near Russia as well normally in the Black and Baltic Seas.