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US weighing if Russia in Cold War pose
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—Washington is trying to gauge whether Russia’s recent bomber
mission near a U.S. aircraft carrier indicated Moscow’s return to a Cold
War “mind-set” and is considering how the Pentagon should respond, a
senior U.S. military officer said on Tuesday.
But other senior U.S. defense and Navy officials stressed they did not
see Russia’s weekend bomber flights south of Japan as provocative. Four
U.S. fighter jets were scrambled on February 9 to escort Russian bombers
that approached the USS Nimitz south of Japan. One Russian bomber flew
over the deck of the aircraft carrier, escorted by a U.S. fighter jet.
Adm. Gary Roughead, U.S. chief of naval operations, downplayed the
incident and said it reflected Russia’s emerging naval power. “I think
what we are seeing is a Russian military or Russian navy that is
emerging and, in the case of the navy, desiring to emerge as a global
navy,” Roughead told reporters at the Pentagon. “I do not consider it to
be provocative,” he said of the bomber mission.
But on Capitol Hill, another top U.S. military officer — Marine Corps
Gen. James Cartwright — said the Pentagon was trying to assess the
implications of Russia’s actions. “Now, what we’re concerned about is
what are the indications of this return to a Cold War mind-set, what are
the implications of that activity and how do we best address that,” said
Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The incident
happened in neutral international airspace, Cartwright said. “We’re just
trying to go back and look at what message was intended by this
overflight,” he told a Senate panel. At the State Department, spokesman
Sean McCormack said the Russian bomber flights were not seen as a
threat.
“The Russians made a decision to resume some of their long-range
aviation flights, involving some of their assets left over from the Cold
War,” he told reporters. “I don’t think we view it as a particular
threat. It is something that we watch closely, and I’m sure folks over
at the Pentagon watch it as well.” Any U.S. expressions of concern to
Russia would probably be carried out through military channels,
McCormack said.
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