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Janzen
said the planes — both Boeing E-3 Sentry aircraft that sport a rotating radar
dome above the fuselage — would be able to monitor military movements covering
an area of 300,000 square kilometers (115,000 square miles) and will not leave
NATO air space. "Regardless, we can observe, we can look, a very long
way," he said. The Sentry is also known as AWACS, short for "airborne
warning and control system," and is the main battlefield command and
surveillance aircraft for NATO air forces. The 28-nation NATO alliance decided
Monday to use AWACS to monitor Russia's military buildup, and the first Sentry
sortie over Romania happened Tuesday, Janzen said.
The Tuesday and Wednesday sorties had previously been planned as training flights before NATO's decision, but were then reconfigured to be part of the new mission, Janzen said. More operations are now being planned. The U.S. Air Force already has deployed extra combat fighters to NATO bases in Eastern Europe, including six F-15s last week in Lithuania and a dozen F-16s this week in Poland. Meanwhile, a U.S. Navy destroyer joined Bulgarian and Romanian naval forces in the Black Sea for exercises a few hundred miles off the Crimean peninsula. The drills on Wednesday include the guided-missile destroyer USS Truxton, the Bulgarian naval frigate Drazki and three Romanian vessels. Bulgaria's Defense Ministry said in a statement that the drills were planned in 2013 and were in no way related to the recent events in the Ukraine.
Read more atThe Tuesday and Wednesday sorties had previously been planned as training flights before NATO's decision, but were then reconfigured to be part of the new mission, Janzen said. More operations are now being planned. The U.S. Air Force already has deployed extra combat fighters to NATO bases in Eastern Europe, including six F-15s last week in Lithuania and a dozen F-16s this week in Poland. Meanwhile, a U.S. Navy destroyer joined Bulgarian and Romanian naval forces in the Black Sea for exercises a few hundred miles off the Crimean peninsula. The drills on Wednesday include the guided-missile destroyer USS Truxton, the Bulgarian naval frigate Drazki and three Romanian vessels. Bulgaria's Defense Ministry said in a statement that the drills were planned in 2013 and were in no way related to the recent events in the Ukraine.
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/nato-flying-surveillance-planes-ukraine-border-22871991
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