French jets intercepted Russian aircraft 11 times over a week in Baltics


PARIS, June 4 (Reuters) - ⁠French warplanes were scrambled 11 times over ⁠the last week as part of NATO's ‌Baltic Air Policing Mission, France's armed forces spokesperson said on Thursday, describing the incursions as a higher-than-usual number of "provocations".

The mission ​protects the airspace of the three ⁠Baltic states - Estonia, ⁠Latvia and Lithuania - through rotating deployments of NATO fighter ⁠jets, ‌filling gaps in their own capabilities. Aircraft are scrambled to intercept unidentified or ⁠non-compliant aircraft.

Guillaume Vernet told a weekly news ​briefing that ‌the unusually high number of interceptions could signal ⁠that Moscow ​was seeking to flex its muscles in the same week it hosted its annual St Petersburg International ⁠Economic Forum.

"The French detachment deployed ​on the Baltic Air Policing mission carried out multiple interceptions of Russian military aircraft flying without flight ⁠plans or radio contact," Vernet said, adding that the intercepted aircraft included armed fighter jets, intelligence and transport planes.

The incidents follow a series of cases ​in which military drones strayed ⁠into the airspace of Finland, Estonia, Latvia and ​Lithuania, stoking fears that the ‌war in Ukraine could spill ​over into NATO's northern borders with Russia.

(Reporting by John Irish; Editing by Jan Harvey)

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