UK says aircraft carrier approached by Russian plane in Norwegian Sea


A sonobuoy is deployed from a Russian Tupolev Tu-142 maritime reconnaissance and anti-submarine warfare (ASW) military aircraft by parachute as a British Royal Navy F-35B fighter aircraft flies nearby, northwest of Norway in the Norwegian Sea, July 2, 2026. The British Ministry of Defence said Royal Navy F-35B fighters of the UK Carrier Strike Group launched from HMS Prince of Wales to intercept the Russian aircraft on the afternoon of the 2 July as it transited close to the Strike Group. UK MOD © Crown copyright 2026/PO Phot Chris Sellars/Handout via REUTERS

LONDON, July 6 (Reuters) - Britain ⁠said its aircraft carrier in the Norwegian Sea was repeatedly ⁠approached by a Russian patrol aircraft, before being escorted ‌away by UK fighter jets, in the latest incident risking a potential escalation between NATO and Russia.

The incident, which Britain called "unsafe and unprofessional", comes ahead of a ​NATO meeting in Ankara on Tuesday, where ⁠NATO members are set ⁠to pledge €70 billion in military assistance to Ukraine for 2026.

Britain said ⁠the Russian "Bear-F" ‌maritime patrol aircraft passed at low altitude and "unnecessarily close" to HMS Prince of Wales, the aircraft carrier at ⁠the centre of a naval formation known as ​a carrier strike ‌group, on July 2.

"The Bear-F...dropped a large number of sonobuoys ⁠in close proximity ​to the carrier," the Ministry of Defence said in a statement, referring to devices which are used to detect and track submarines.

Two F-35 ⁠fighter jets from the HMS Prince of ​Wales were sent to intercept the Russian aircraft until it left the area.

Britain's carrier strike group is currently deployed under NATO's command in ⁠the High North, as part of efforts to boost North Atlantic security given concern over Russian aggression in the region.

Earlier this year, Britain deployed military vessels to prevent attacks on cables and pipelines ​by Russian submarines that spent more than ⁠a month in and around UK waters.

Britain said in a separate ​statement on Monday that defence minister Dan ‌Jarvis had recently visited UK forces ​onboard the aircraft carrier in waters near Iceland.

(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti, writing by Sarah Young; editing by William James)

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