Shoigu: 10 US Air Force Strategic Bombers Trained to Use Nukes Against Russia This Month
14:14 GMT 23.11.2021 (Updated: 15:00 GMT 23.11.2021)
© Tech. Sgt. Timothy MooreA U.S. Air Force B-1 Lancer from Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota, and F-16 Fighting Falcons from Misawa Air Base, Japan, conducted bilateral joint training with Japan Air Self-Defense Force F-2s off the coast of Northern Japan, April 22, 2020.
Subscribe
On Tuesday, Russian Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu spoke to his Chinese counterpart, Wei Fenghe, via video conference.
Russian Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu said that ten US strategic bombers have trained to use nuclear weapons against Russia this month.
Elaborating on his remarks, Shoigu said that "this month, during US strategic forces exercise Global Thunder, ten strategic bombers practised the option of using nuclear weapons against Russia almost simultaneously from the Western and Eastern directions."
The minister also noted that Russia has recorded a significant increase in the activity of US bombers near the country's eastern borders, with about 30 sorties detected this month. In 2019, there were only three such flights, Shoigu underlined.
Following the talks with his Chinese counterpart Wei Fenghe, the Russian minister said "such actions of the US strategic bomber aviation pose a threat not only to Russia but also to China."
Shoigu said that military cooperation between the two countries is ramping up, with Russian and Chinese troops "interacting on land, sea, and air."
The Russian minister said bilateral relations between Moscow and Beijing are "trusting and friendly," while Fenghe commented that Russia is successfully countering US military threats, and the two countries are jointly opposing the American tactics of containment.
"I also support your vision of the military threat to our countries coming from the United States of America," Fenghe said during the video conference with Shoigu.
Following the negotiations, both Russian and Chinese ministers agreed to intensify joint strategic exercises and patrols.
"I am convinced that today's meeting will serve the development of relations of comprehensive partnership and strategic interaction between Russia and China," said Shoigu.
Moscow earlier voiced its concerns over how the US and other Western countries hype up claims of Russia's purported "invasion" of Ukraine, with this pretext used by the West to beef up the Ukrainian military.
The allegations of the "invasion" were dismissed by Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov as "absurd" and he voiced concern that the Western military aid will lead to a "further escalation" of tensions.
China, for its turn, recently denied claims about its alleged "hypersonic missile test" over the South China Sea, which reportedly left Pentagon officials "baffled" over how Beijing managed to develop such technology.
Beijing has also recently reiterated concerns about cooperation between the United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom under the AUKUS deal in the field of nuclear submarines, saying that "these actions exacerbate tensions in the region, incite an arms race, threaten regional peace and stability, and undermine international efforts in the field of non-proliferation of nuclear weapons."