Current:Home > FinanceWith ‘God’s-eye view,’ secretive surveillance flights keep close watch on Russia and Ukraine -Wealth Axis Pro
With ‘God’s-eye view,’ secretive surveillance flights keep close watch on Russia and Ukraine
View
Date:2025-04-14 20:12:52
ABOARD A FRENCH AIR FORCE AWACS (AP) — Off in the distance, Ukraine, fighting for its survival. Seen from up here, in the cockpit of a French air force surveillance plane flying over neighboring Romania, the snow-dusted landscapes look deceptively peaceful.
The dead from Russia’s war, the shattered Ukrainian towns and mangled battlefields, aren’t visible to the naked eye through the clouds.
But French military technicians riding farther back in the aircraft, monitoring screens that display the word “secret” when idle, have a far more penetrating view. With a powerful radar that rotates six times every minute on the fuselage and a bellyful of surveillance gear, the plane can spot missile launches, airborne bombing runs and other military activity in the conflict.
As the second anniversary of Russia’s Feb. 24, 2022, invasion of Ukraine nears, The Associated Press obtained rare and exclusive access aboard the giant Airborne Warning and Control System, or AWACS, aircraft. With 26 military personnel and an AP journalist aboard, it flew a 10-hour reconnaissance mission from central France to Romanian airspace and back, peering with electronic eyes across southern Ukraine and the Black Sea to Russian-occupied Crimea and beyond.
Circling on auto-pilot at 34,000 feet (10 kilometers), the plane with a proud cockerel painted on its tail fed intelligence in real time to ground-based commanders.
Its mission for NATO on the eastern flank of the 31-nation military alliance also, in effect, drew a do-not-cross line in European skies.
The plane’s sustained presence high above eastern Romania — seeing and also being seen by Russian forces — signaled how intensely NATO is watching its borders and Russia, ready if necessary to act should Russian aggression threaten to extend beyond Ukraine.
SHIELDS FOR NATO, PIECES OF AVIATION HISTORY
Regular surveillance flights, together with fighter patrols, ground-based radar, missile batteries and other hardware at NATO’s disposal, form what the commander of France’s AWACS squadron described as “a shield” against any potential spill-over.
The “ultimate goal is, of course, no conflict and deterrence,” said the commander, a lieutenant colonel named Richard. Because of French security concerns, the AP was only able to identify him and other military personnel by their ranks and first names.
“We need to show that we have the shield, show to the other countries that NATO is collective defense,” he continued. “We have the ability to detect everywhere. And we are not here for a conflict. We are here to show that we are present and ready.”
France’s four AWACS are among a variety of surveillance aircraft, including unmanned UAV drones, that gather intelligence for NATO and its member nations. Lt. Col. Richard said the French E-3F-type AWACS see for hundreds of kilometers (miles) with their distinctive black-and-white rooftop radar domes, although he wouldn’t be precise.
E-3s are modified Boeing 707s. The 707 first flew in 1957 but stopped carrying passengers commercially in 2013, so E-3s are also flying examples of aviation history.
“We can detect aircraft, we can detect UAVs, we can detect missiles and we can detect ships. That’s true, for sure, in Ukraine, especially when we are at the border,” Lt. Col. Richard said.
As the plane loitered and scanned, the crew detected a distant Russian AWACS above the Sea of Azov, many hundreds of kilometers away on the Crimean Peninsula’s eastern side. The Russian aircraft also seemingly spotted the French AWACS: Sensors along the fuselage picked up Russian radar signals.
“We know that they see us, they know that we see them. Let’s say that it’s some kind of a dialogue between them and us,” the French co-pilot, Major Romain, said.
HAWK-EYED AWACS ON CALL TO SAFEGUARD THE OLYMPICS
NATO also has its own fleet of 14 AWACS, also E-3s. They can detect low-flying targets within 400 kilometers (250 miles) and higher-flying targets another 120 kilometers (75 miles) beyond that, the alliance says. It says one AWACS can surveil an area the size of Poland; three can cover all of central Europe.
Able to fly for 12 hours without refueling, French AWACS aren’t limited to surveillance, communications and air-traffic control missions for NATO. They expect to be deployed as part of the massive security operation for the Paris Olympics, providing additional radar surveillance with what Lt. Col. Richard called their “God’s-eye view.”
Russian pilots have at times made clear that they don’t like being watched.
In 2022, a Russian fighter jet released a missile near a British air force RC-135 Rivet Joint surveillance aircraft that was flying in international airspace over the Black Sea, Britain’s government said. The U.S. government released video in March 2023 of a Russian fighter jet dumping fuel on a U.S. Air Force surveillance drone. The drone crashed into the Black Sea.
Rivet Joints are particularly capable spy planes, and Russian authorities “really hate” their ability to snoop on the Ukraine war, said Justin Bronk, a researcher at the Royal United Services Institute defense think tank in London.
As well as gathering “real-time intelligence that theoretically could be shared with Ukrainian partners,” the planes also furnish “fantastic” insight about “how Russian forces actually operate in a real war,” Bronk said in a phone interview.
“So of course, the Russians are furious,” he said.
IN THE SKIES, REGULAR ENCOUNTERS
NATO also scrambles fighter jets to scope Russian flights. It says allied aircraft took to the skies more than 500 times in 2022 to intercept Russian aircraft that ventured close to NATO airspace. The number of such encounters dropped to more than 300 in 2023, according to the Brussels-headquartered alliance.
The strengthening of Ukrainian air defenses with Western weaponry may partly explain the decrease, with shoot-downs seemingly making Russian pilots warier. NATO observed reduced activity by manned Russian flights over the western Black Sea last year. NATO says “the vast majority of aerial encounters between NATO and Russian jets were safe and professional” and that Russian incursions into NATO airspace were rare and generally short.
Aboard the French flight, the co-pilot, Major Romain, said Russian planes haven’t intercepted a French AWACS “for a long time” and that if they did, French pilots would try to defuse any tension.
“Our orders are to be, let’s say, passive,” he said. “For a civilian, let’s say ‘polite.’”
___
Find more of AP’s coverage of Russia and Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
veryGood! (3297)
Related
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Florida Gulf Coast drivers warned of contaminated gas as Tropical Storm Idalia bears down
- West Virginia governor appoints 5 to board overseeing opioid fund distribution
- Horoscopes Today, August 26, 2023
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Kick Off Football Season With Team Pride Jewelry From $10
- Elton John is 'in good health' after being hospitalized for fall at home
- Shooting that wounded 2 at White Sox game likely involved gun fired inside stadium, police say
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Judge dismisses lawsuit by sorority sisters who sought to block a transgender woman from joining
Ranking
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Drea de Matteo, Adriana La Cerva on 'The Sopranos,' launches OnlyFans account
- How Bradley Cooper and Irina Shayk's Enviably Friendly Parenting Arrangement Really Works
- NHL offseason grades: Pittsburgh Penguins, Toronto Maple Leafs make the biggest news
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Not just messing with a robot: Georgia school district brings AI into classrooms, starting in kindergarten
- Kick Off Football Season With Team Pride Jewelry From $10
- California sues district that requires parents be notified if their kids change pronouns
Recommendation
Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
There's a labor shortage in the U.S. Why is it so hard for migrants to legally work?
Benches clear twice in an inning as Rays hand Yankees another series defeat
NYPD warns it has zero tolerance for drones at the US Open
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Simone Biles' record eighth US gymnastics title will be one to remember
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis faces Black leaders’ anger after racist killings in Jacksonville
Miley Cyrus says she and dad Billy Ray Cyrus have 'wildly different' relationships to fame