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JBER-based jet fighters intercept Russian reconnaissance aircraft

An F-22 jet fighter based at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson accompanies a Russian Tu-95 as it transits the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone during a September 2018 intercept. The F-22s have frequently intercepted Tu-95s that have flown into the Alaskan ADIZ in recent years, but last week, they intercepted a different aircraft, the Il-20, on three consecutive days in the skies off Alaska.
North American Aerospace Defense Command
An F-22 jet fighter based at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson accompanies a Russian Tu-95 as it transits the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone during a September 2018 intercept. The F-22s have frequently intercepted Tu-95s that have flown into the Alaskan ADIZ in recent years, but last week, they intercepted a different aircraft, the Il-20, on three consecutive days in the skies off Alaska.

Aircraft's flight near Alaska 'not a threat,' NORAD says, but military analyst says Ukraine war makes it 'notable'

Fighter jets from Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson intercepted Russian reconnaissance planes three times last week in airspace around Alaska. That’s happened often in recent years, but a Fairbanks-based military analyst says it’s noteworthy that this time, it occurred while the United States is helping Ukraine defend itself from Russian invaders.

JBER-based F-22s last week intercepted a Russian Ilyushin Il-20 like this one on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
Wikimedia Commons
JBER-based F-22s intercepted a Russian Ilyushin Il-20 like this one on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of last week.

JBER-based F-22 fighters scrambled on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday last week to intercept a Russian IL-20 that had entered the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone, or ADIZ. That’s international airspace, but it’s not unusual for a nation to send fighters out to meet foreign aircraft that enter their ADIZ and often to accompany them until they leave it.

“On average, we conduct about six to seven intercepts a year,” says Capt. Lauren Ott, a spokesperson for the North American Aerospace Defense Command’s Alaskan Region based at JBER. Ott says the number of intercepts has varied annually since Russia resumed its so-called out-of-area long-range aviation activity 15 years ago.

“Some years, as high as 14, and some years, as low as zero,” she said in an interview Monday.

This year, however, the usual game of cat-and-mouse is playing out in an entirely different context -- one in which the United States and Russia aren’t at war, but certainly at odds because of the U.S’s leading role in supporting Ukraine in its fight against Russia’s invasion. But Ott says that didn’t affect last week’s otherwise routine interceptions of the Russian planes near Alaska.

“The recent activity by the Russian aircraft in the Alaskan ADIZ is not perceived as a threat, nor is the activity seen as provocative,” she said.

But a military analyst based at the University of Alaska Fairbanks says the intercepts are, at the very least, “notable.”

UAF Center for Arctic Security and Resilience Director Troy Bouffard presents during the 2021 Norwich University Military Writers Symposium at the university in Vermont. The symposium's theme was " Global Conflict or Cooperation? Evolving Arctic Security."
Norwich University/YouTube
UAF Center for Arctic Security and Resilience Director Troy Bouffard presents during the 2021 Norwich University Military Writers Symposium at the university in Vermont. The symposium's theme was " Global Conflict or Cooperation? Evolving Arctic Security."

Troy Bouffard s a 22-year Army veteran who now directs UAF’s Center for Arctic Security and Resilience. He says the timing of the Russian sorties is notable because they likely were intended to send a message to the United States and its allies.

“Russia is trying to demonstrate that it can still project power in different areas, even being decisively engaged in Ukraine,” he said in an interview Monday.

Bouffard says it’s also no coincidence that the Russians decided now is a good time to resume the flights around Alaska, because the Il-20 is equipped for intelligence, signals and reconnaissance or ISR missions. And he suspects they were interested in listening-in on radio communications between U.S. and allied forces engaged in the latest round of Red Flag military training exercises that were going on on ranges around the state last week.

“It was definitely right in the middle of Red Flag,” he noted.

Bouffard said he thinks the Russians also were sending a message by conducting the sorties with only one Il-20, and not a Tu-95 Bear bomber that usually carries out the missions, often accompanied by a Russian jet fighter. He says the flights enable the Russians to gain useful intelligence, sometimes by just noting how the Americans respond.

“All the aircraft that they send into an ADIZ is meant to invoke a response and a reaction for the purposes of being able to monitor that and see if they can learn from it,” he said.

Ott said that there haven’t been any Russian aircraft sorties since last week. She declined to say whether there had been any others earlier this year, and where the Il-20 entered the Alaska ADIZ.

Tim Ellis has been working as a KUAC reporter/producer since 2010. He has more than 30 years experience in broadcast, print and online journalism.