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NORAD completes bomber intercept exercise over Alberta, Canada by Ed Adamczyk Washington (UPI) May 29, 2019 NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, on Wednesday announced a successful simulated intercept over Canadian airspace. Royal Canadian Air Force CF-18 fighter planes on May 22 worked with B-52 long-range bombers of the U.S. Air Force to demonstrate the current defense capabilities of NORAD, the U.S.-Canadian force charged with the aerospace warning, aerospace control and maritime warning for North America. The B-52s were simulated enemies in the exercise, as they crossed into airspace over Alberta province, part of the Canadian Air Defense Identification Zone. "This offered an opportunity to practice a critical skill," NORAD Cmdr. Terrence O'Shaughnessy said in a tweet on Wednesday about the exercise. "Working with other combatant commands enhances our efforts to function as a global force with a unified purpose: to deter, detect and, if necessary, defeat any threat to North America." The exercise came two days after F-22 fighter planes of the U.S. Air Force intercepted six Russian military planes off the coast of Alaska. The Russian aircraft remained in international airspace and there were no further incidents. Two F-22 planes intercepted two Tupolev Tu-95 bombers. A day later, on May 22, two other F-22s intercepted two more Tu-95s and two Su-35 fighter jets. The U.S. planes chased the Russian planes until they left the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone. A U.S. E-3 spy plane was also in the area, monitoring the airspace. U.S. officials said the Russian planes did not enter U.S. sovereign airspace, which extends vertically above U.S. territorial waters. Aircraft are allowed to fly in the ADIZ without authorization, but will be intercepted and treated as enemy aircraft. NORAD said that U.S. forces have intercepted an average of six or seven Russian planes in the Alaska zone every year since 2007.twitter_timer = setTimeout(function() {if(typeof twttr !== "undefined"){twttr.widgets.createTweet('1133721912830509061', jQuery("div[data-tweet-id='1133721912830509061']")[0]);clearTimeout(twitter_timer);}},2000);
Under the dome: Fears Pacific nuclear 'coffin' is leaking Majuro (AFP) Marshall Islands (AFP) May 26, 2019 As nuclear explosions go, the US "Cactus" bomb test in May 1958 was relatively small - but it has left a lasting legacy for the Marshall Islands in a dome-shaped radioactive dump. The dome - described by a UN chief Antonio Guterres as "a kind of coffin" - was built two decades after the blast in the Pacific ocean region. The US military filled the bomb crater on Runit island with radioactive waste, capped it with concrete, and told displaced residents of the Pacific's remote Enewetak atoll t ... read more
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