The Cold War got a little colder this week when more than 50 Russian warships, dozens of aircraft and submarines conducted major war games on Alaska’s doorstep, a troubling development, as such drills have not occurred in the region since Soviet times.
Russia’s navy chief, Admiral Nikolai Yevmenov, said that elements of the nation’s Pacific Fleet were taking part in the exercise in the Bering Sea, which involved multiple practice missile launches.
We are holding such massive drills there for the first time ever, Yevmenov said in a statement released by the Russian Defense Ministry. He emphasized that the war games are part of Russia’s efforts to boost its presence in the Arctic region and protect its resources.
We are building up our forces to ensure the economic development of the region. We are getting used to the Arctic spaces.
The Russian military has rebuilt and expanded numerous facilities across the polar region in recent years, revamping runways and deploying additional air defense assets.
Russia has prioritized boosting its military presence in the Arctic region, which is believed to hold up to 25% of the Earth’s undiscovered oil and gas.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has cited estimates that put the value of Arctic mineral riches at US$30 trillion.
Russia’s Pacific Fleet said the Omsk nuclear submarine and the Varyag missile cruiser launched cruise missiles at a practice target in the Bering Sea as part of the exercise.
The maneuvers also saw Onyx cruise missiles being fired at a practice target in the Gulf of Anadyr from the coast of the Chukchi Peninsula.
As the exercise was ongoing, US military spotted a Russian submarine surfacing near Alaska on Thursday. The Russian military exercise is taking place in international waters, well outside US territory.
However, US Northern Command spokesman Bill Lewis said the North American Aerospace Defense Command and US Northern Command were closely monitoring the submarine.
Putin’s Arctic priority was exemplified by a daring paratroop drop over the High Arctic in April, 2020.
At a high altitude, Russian paratroopers tumbled from the belly of a giant transport plane into a sky of cotton clouds and then proceeded to fight a three-day mock battle in a winter wasteland.
The exercise on Franz Josef Land, a Russian archipelago of largely uninhabited islands in the High Arctic, set the defense and diplomatic communities abuzz, particularly in Canada.
The paratroopers jumped from an Ilyushin Il-76 transport aircraft from a height of 10,000 meters (30,000 feet) and were, according to the Russian Defense Ministry and media, testing new equipment developed for extreme cold weather operations.
It’s the highest altitude drop we’ve seen,” said Andrea Charron, director of the University of Manitoba’s Center for Defense and Security Studies.
Once they landed, they completed a three-day combat training exercise, and that is just an incredible feat of human endurance whether you look at it from a military perspective, or any perspective. That is just an incredible display of logistics, courage and ingenuity.
The Russian military has expanded the number and the scope of its war games in recent years as Russia-West relations have sunk to their lowest level since the Cold War after Russia’s 2014 occupation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.
Asia Times / ABC Flash Point WW III News 2020.
While the USA and NATO deploy military exercises near the Russian borders @ the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea, Putin order his defense to have drills near Alaska?
Tit for Tat?