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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
USS Donald Cook buzzed again by Russian jets in Baltic
2016-04-14
Yet again Russian jets made provocatively close passes to an American warship, as tensions continue between Moscow and Washington over the conflicts in Ukraine and Syria. A senior defense official told CBS News there were two recent incidents that were "more aggressive than anything we've seen in some time."

The first, on April 11, involved two Russian SU24s, when the USS Donald Cook left the Polish port of Gdynia and was about 70 nautical miles from Kaliningrad in the Baltic Sea. The official said the Russian jets made 20 passes of the American ship and flew within 1,000 yards at an altitude of just 100 feet.

In the second incident on April 12, two Russian KA27 Helix helicopters flew several circles around the Donald Cook, apparently taking photos, after which two jets again made numerous close passes of the ship in what the official described as "Simulated Attack Profile."

"They were so close they created wakes in the water," the official said.

CNN reports "there is an intense discussion about releasing video and still photos of the Russian encounter to demonstrate the danger the jets posed to the ship."

It's not clear how many times this type of incident has happened, but in 2014 Pentagon officials publicly decried a similar incident in the Baltic. A close-flying jet came within a few thousand feet of the USS Donald Cook, a guided missile destroyer which was conducting a "routine mission" at the time. The U.S. ship tried to contact the plane's cockpit, but received no response.

The Russian plane, which the U.S. says was unarmed, made at least 12 passes. This continued for about 90 minutes. The event ended without incident. While the jet did not overfly the deck, Col. Steve Warren called the action "provocative and unprofessional."
Time for our naval air corps to find a Russian destroyer out in the middle of the ocean...
Posted by:Steve White

#12  Launch the barrage balloons!
Posted by: SteveS   2016-04-14 22:01  

#11  Radar lock?
Posted by: Frank G   2016-04-14 21:13  

#10  Anyone remember KAL 007 ?
Posted by: Besoeker   2016-04-14 18:00  

#9  Bet The Spy 1 D was off.
Posted by: Shipman   2016-04-14 16:19  

#8  According to An Nahar, Russia sez they weren't reckless or provocative, insisting they'd observed all safety precautions. Putin's Pond, indeed.
Posted by: trailing wife   2016-04-14 14:10  

#7  Light up any Russian aircraft that comes within 10 miles with the targeting radars. If they pass 2 miles shoot it down.

End of issue.
Posted by: DarthVader   2016-04-14 13:10  

#6  Good one. :-)
Posted by: gorb   2016-04-14 11:13  

#5  That would be flaccid, not flexible.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2016-04-14 08:14  

#4  Why the big surprise? Everybody knows the Baltic Sea is a Putin lake!

They do now. Good thing our CIC can be more 'flexible' his second term.
Posted by: Bobby   2016-04-14 07:31  

#3  CAPT Will C. Rogers, skipper of the U.S.S. Vincennes might have approached the problem a bit differently.
Posted by: Besoeker   2016-04-14 06:21  

#2  test all the chaff dispensers that just happen to be in the flight path? Little bit of metal foil sucked into those engines might be fun to see.
Posted by: Beldar Smith4412   2016-04-14 03:58  

#1  Yes it is provocative and shoot them down. They would shoot us down if we did the same thing.
Posted by: texhooey   2016-04-14 02:43  

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