NATO Baltic Air Policing Mission Reduces Number of Fighter Jets From 12 to 8 - Reports

© REUTERS / Ints KalninsNATO and US flags flutter as U.S. Air Force F-22 Raptor fighter flies over the military air base in Siauliai, Lithuania, April 27, 2016.
NATO and US flags flutter as U.S. Air Force F-22 Raptor fighter flies over the military air base in Siauliai, Lithuania, April 27, 2016. - Sputnik International
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RIGA (Sputnik) - The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is reducing the number of fighter jets patrolling the Baltic airspace from 12 to eight, the Delfi news portal reported.
"Only eight fighter jets will patrol the sky over the Baltic States this year instead of 12", the Delfi news portal said.

Four Belgian fighters will be stationed at the Lithuanian Siauliai Air Base, and four Polish fighters at the Amari airfield in Estonia for the next four months.

In this video grab taken from a footage on Aug. 13, 2019, and distributed by Russian Defense Ministry Press Service, a NATO F-18 warplane is viewed from the window of a passenger plane carrying Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu over the Baltic Sea. - Sputnik International
Moscow Says NATO Impedes Adoption of Measures to Enhance Air Safety Over Baltics
NATO's Baltic Air Policing Mission aims at ensuring the safety of the airspace over Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. The mission was launched in 2004, when the three states joined NATO. As the Baltic countries do not have jets that could carry out air policing, NATO members' jets stationed in Lithuania control their airspace on a rotational basis.

In January 2017, the Netherlands’ Air Forces took over the policing mission in the Baltic region from the French and later that year passed it over to Poland.

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