Russian, US jets had near miss over Syria: US officials | Inquirer News

Russian, US jets had near miss over Syria: US officials

/ 04:59 AM October 29, 2016
Russian air force pilots sit in the cockpit of a Russian Sukhoi Su-30SM fighter jet before departure on a mission at the Russian Hmeimim military base in Latakia province, in the northwest of Syria, on December 16, 2015. Russia began its air war in Syria on September 30, conducting air strikes against a range of anti-regime armed groups including US-backed rebels and jihadist groups. Moscow has said it is fighting and other "terrorist groups," but its campaign has come under fire by Western officials who accuse the Kremlin of seeking to prop up Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. —PAUL GYPTEAU / AFP

ABOARD A US MILITARY AIRCRAFT — A Russian fighter flew dangerously close to a US warplane over eastern Syria, US defence officials said Friday, highlighting the risks of a serious mishap in the increasingly crowded airspace.

The near miss occurred late on October 17, when a Russian jet that was escorting a larger spy plane maneuvered in the vicinity of an American warplane, Air Force Lt.. Gen. Jeff Harrigian said.

The Russian jet came to “inside of half a mile,” he added.

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Another US military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the American pilot could feel the turbulence produced by the Russian jet’s engines.

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“It was close enough you could feel the jet wash of the plane passing by,“ the official said.

It appeared the Russian pilot had simply not seen the US jet, as it was dark and the planes were flying without lights.

“I would attribute it to not having the necessary situational awareness given all those platforms operating together,” Harrigian said.

The incident raises serious questions about the extent to which pilots are able to track the complex airspace they operate in.

The US-led coalition has set up a hotline with Russian counterparts so the different militaries can discuss the approximate locations and missions of planes, and avoid operating in the same space at the same time.

In this case, the American pilot tried unsuccessfully to reach the Russian jet via an emergency radio channel.

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The next day, US officers used the hotline to ask Russia what had happened and they said “the pilot didn’t see” the American plane, the official said.

Coalition spokesman Col. John Dorrian, in a videoconference from Baghdad Friday, said the coalition did not assess the incident as “something that was done with nefarious intent”.

“Therefore they’ve continued discussing that incident, and those deconfliction calls continued to be conducted on a daily basis,” Dorrian said.

Harrigian said there had been an increase in close calls over the past six weeks, with intentional near misses – when a Russian jet deliberately follows a coalition plane too closely – “happening one every 10 days-ish.”

Russia is flying constant air patrols over Syria, the vast majority of them over the devastated city of Aleppo, and routinely transits parts of the country the US-coalition operates in, officials said.

Russia says it has not bombed Aleppo since October 18.

The Pentagon periodically chides Russia for “unsafe and unprofessional behavior” in air operations.

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This incident was deemed unsafe, but not necessarily unprofessional, officials said.

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