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|    'Ready for anything': US aircraft carrie    |
|    26 Oct 22 11:06:39    |
      From: slider@anashram.com              The crew of a giant US aircraft carrier in European waters says they are       ready to fight Russia if the call comes but their mission is to deter       threats and prevent escalation.              The USS George H W Bush is helping to test NATO's ability to defend itself       - a mission that became all the more real in the wake of Russia's war in       Ukraine.              In the past few days, F18 jets have flown from the carrier in southern       Europe all the way out to Lithuania and Poland on the alliance's eastern       edge, close to Russia, operating alongside warplanes from other allied       nations and with NATO warships and ground troops.              The commander of the carrier strike group told Sky News his message to       Russia is that his men and women "are ready for any mission".              "We want peace - it's what everybody wants," Rear Admiral Dennis Velez       said, speaking inside a hangar on board the ship, which holds more than 70       jets, helicopters and other aircraft.              "We want the war [in Ukraine] to be over and to bring stability back to       the region and have a peaceful and stable Europe - but, for us, we are       ready."              Asked if that meant he was ready for war if necessary, the admiral said:       "This ship, this strike group, our allies: we are ready for anything. We       demonstrate that every day."              At least two Russian warships have been watching the action, which forms       part of a series of NATO activities, from a safe distance, as have Russian       aircraft.              "We have seen them," said Rear Admiral Velez, speaking on Tuesday as the       strike group of the aircraft carrier and escort ships sailed through the       Adriatic Sea, off the coast of Italy.              As to what was said to the Russians, he answered: "Nothing… They have the       same right as we do to operate in international waters, so we just follow       international law and the rules of the road."              The vicinity of Russia's military and the knowledge that Russian forces       are locked in a brutal war with Ukraine - which is not part of NATO but       shares borders with members of the alliance - means operating in Europe is       no longer just another peacetime training exercise for the more than       5,000-strong crew of US sailors on the carrier.              "It is a real change," said Lieutenant Cordan Mackenzie, 27, one of the       F18 pilots on board. Her call sign is 'Big Poppa'.              "Most of the time what we are doing, it feels like training, it feels like       a game but you come out here and have intel [intelligence] briefings and       you fly missions with NATO allies and it really solidifies how real the       things that we do in the world are and how important our mission set is:       having a presence here in the Adriatic and having the US work with our       NATO allies to make sure the world knows we are still a power to be       reckoned with."              She, and her fellow aviators, face the possibility of one day being       ordered to fight in air-to-air combat against the Russians should tensions       escalate significantly.              It is a type of operation that US, British and other Western pilots did       not have to contemplate during the long war in Afghanistan when they were       not pitted against a rival air force.              "It is daunting," said Lieutenant Mackenzie.              "It is one of the things that you just have to rely on your training.       Without a doubt, I think US-trained navy pilots are the best in the world…       All we do out here is train and get ready for a fight that might come and       I think when it comes, pilot to pilot, I hope we are the better man in the       box."              The carrier is taking part in a relatively new NATO series of activities       called Neptune, which - unlike longer-planned, more predictable, annual       exercises - allows allies to be faster, more flexible and more dynamic       with how they test their maritime, air and land capabilities.              This is designed to improve their ability to deter Russia - a task that       allies have focused on even more intensely following Vladimir Putin's       all-out invasion of Ukraine on 24 February.              "We have stepped up our readiness, our preparedness and strengthened the       way we work together across the alliance to prevent and defend every inch       of NATO territory," Jens Stoltenberg, the secretary general of NATO, told       Sky News on a visit to the carrier.              For example, he said this was also only the third time since the end of       the Cold War that a US aircraft carrier group has come under NATO command,       with all three of those occasions happening as part of Neptune drills in       the past year.              The NATO chief also voiced new concern about Ukraine after Russia falsely       alleged the Ukrainians were planning to use a radioactive "dirty bomb" on       their own territory. The claim could be part of a "false flag" plot by       Moscow to launch such an attack and blame Kyiv.              "Russia has accused others of things they intend to do themselves, so we       need to monitor closely what Russia now does. And they must know that use       of a dirty bomb or a radiological bomb is a serious escalation," Mr       Stoltenberg said.              Asked how NATO would respond to such an attack, he said: "It will be a       very serious escalation."              Allies are also concerned that Vladimir Putin could even resort to a       nuclear strike as his forces suffer defeats at the hands of Ukraine’s       military, backed by Western weapons.              The head of NATO said: "The likelihood of any use of a nuclear weapon in       Ukraine remains low, at the same time the consequences are so devastating,       so enormous it is a risk we have to take seriously."              https://news.sky.com/story/ready-for-anything-us-aircraft-carrie       -crew-training-for-war-with-russia-but-aims-to-deter-threats-12730460              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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