U.S. Air Force spy plane takes spotlight in empty Ukraine airspace
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[February 22, 2022]
By Tom Sims
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - While Ukraine's
airspace has been largely empty amid the crisis with Russia, a remotely
piloted U.S. military vehicle called the RQ-4 Global Hawk has flown over
the country in circles for hours at a time.
Over the past month, two of the spy planes have travelled on regular
missions from the Mediterranean Sea to Ukraine, where they have
navigated in repeated loops in the north and the east, according to
Flightradar24.
The drones' high-altitude, long-distance flights have coincided with a
military build-up by Russia along the Ukrainian border and a flurry of
diplomacy among leaders of the United States, Europe and Russia to avert
war.
At times, the two planes - under the call signs Forte10, Forte11 and
Forte12 - have been the only active aircraft publicly visible over
eastern Ukraine. Aviation watchers have taken note, speculating that the
United States is making its presence known in a show of force.
"With these types of flights, leaving the transponder on is a conscious
decision," said Ian Petchenik, communications director at Flightradar24.
The U.S. Air Force declined to comment on the details of the flights but
said the United States routinely operates aircraft in support of
intelligence objectives.
"These missions demonstrate our continued commitment to safety and
security in the region," a spokesperson said.
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On Monday evening, Forte11 returned
to the Mediterranean after a nearly 24-hour trip over Ukraine. Its
transponder went off at a low altitude near the Sigonella Naval Air
Station in Sicily. It was the 13th similar mission.
According to the Air Force's website, the mission
of such aircraft is to collect intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance "to support joint combatant forces in worldwide
peacetime, contingency and wartime operations."
Their manufacturer, Northrop Grumman, says the planes see "potential
threats" and "gather near-real-time, high-resolution imagery of
large areas of land in all types of weather – day or night."
The flight path has stood out because international commercial
aviation, out of an abundance of caution, has largely avoided
Ukraine airspace, especially in the east along the Russian border.
On Feb. 15, Flightradar24 said Forte11 was its most tracked flight,
and then later reported that it had been airborne for more than 21
hours.
The aircraft, with a wingspan of nearly 40 meters and length of 15
meters, can typically fly more than 30 hours.
In 2014, the craft travelled 34.3 hours without refuelling to set a
record for the U.S. Air Force, according to its website.
Northrop Grumman has been providing the aircraft to the USAF for 20
years. In August, it won a five-year contract to maintain the craft
for NATO.
(Reporting by Tom Sims; Editing by Miranda Murray and Angus MacSwan)
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