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Outside View: Russian Air Power -- Part 2

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  • Outside View: Russian Air Power -- Part 2

    OUTSIDE VIEW: RUSSIAN AIR POWER -- PART 2
    By Nikita Petrov

    United Press International
    Aug 19 2008

    Past problems with lack of funding for pilot and crew training have
    led to strange incidents in the Russian air force.

    A few years ago, a Maj. Troyanov lost orientation in the Baltic sky
    and, instead of Kaliningrad region, flew over Lithuania and had to
    eject from the aircraft when his plane ran out of fuel. It was later
    established that Troyanov had had just seven hours of flight experience
    in the year preceding the incident. Lack of combat experience was
    among the reasons for the loss of two planes during the peacekeeping
    operation in South Ossetia.

    Currently the Russian air force has enough fuel, three-star
    Col. Gen. Alexander Zelin, the commander of the Russian air force,
    told a recent news conference in Moscow. By now, the average flying
    time among tactical and army aviation pilots has risen to around 90
    hours a year. Special attention is paid to young pilots.

    The flying time for the crews of strategic bombers has also increased
    considerably. Starting from Aug. 17, 2007, Tupolev Tu-160 Blackjack and
    Tupolev Tu-95MS Bear war planes resumed flights over the Atlantic,
    Pacific and Arctic oceans. Since then, the crews have conducted
    more than 150 patrols amid "counteraction by aviation of neighboring
    countries," Zelin said.

    NATO fighters approached very close to Russian planes, sometimes
    beyond safety regulations, aiming their weapons, and the Russian
    crews responded, although they had no combat missiles on board, by
    simulating firing at the "potential adversaries," practicing repelling
    "hostile" attacks. In fact, it was joint combat training.

    During the 2007-2008 joint drills with Russia's Northern and Black
    Sea fleets in the Atlantic, long-range aircraft for the first time
    in many years saw intensive action far away from their bases. They
    rehearsed the destruction of naval targets together with ships,
    naval aviation, air defense and shipboard missile systems.

    This year Russian army aviation crews have conducted a few dozen
    tactical training exercises with live firing of missiles at aerial,
    ground and naval targets. The exercises were usually part of joint
    drills with motorized infantry, coastal units and navy vessels. This
    proves that the Russian armed forces command is focused on simultaneous
    multirole combat employment of troops on the ground, in the air and
    at sea.

    Joint drills of long-range aviation and navy ships are scheduled to
    be held in the Indian Ocean this year. Last year's cruise will be
    repeated, but with new objectives and in new conditions.

    Another priority is the further development of the joint air defense
    system of the Russian-led Commonwealth of Independent States, which
    is the only operational defensive system within the C.I.S. countries,
    Zelin said.

    Besides Russia, this system comprises the air defense troops of
    Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Armenia and
    Ukraine. The C.I.S. countries are now facing the task of improving
    the control system of the joint air defense and securing mutual
    information exchanges concerning the situation at the frontiers of
    the commonwealth.

    Currently a universal automation equipment complex for command and
    control centers is under development on request by the C.I.S. Air
    Defense Coordination Committee. Air defense troops from the member
    countries are engaged in joint combat duty. Around 100 warplanes at
    a time take part in drills within this system.

    The Russian air force still has a lot of problems to be solved,
    Zelin said. Nevertheless, it is clear that it is recovering, he added.
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