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NORAD intercepts three groups of Russian planes near Alaska
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 28, 2020

F-22 fighter planes intercepted three groups of two Russian patrol aircraft near Alaska before they entered U.S. or Canadian airspace, North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, said on Friday.

The Russian Tu-142 planes entered the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone, which extends outward from North America, late Thursday and came "within 50 nautical miles of Alaskan shores," a NORAD statement said.

It added, though, that the Russian planes never entered United States or Canadian sovereign airspace, and instead "loitered within the ADIZ" for about five hours before departing.

The practice of chasing Russian planes from U.S. airspace has become common in 2020.

"Our northern approaches have had an increase in foreign military activity as our competitors continue to expland their military presence and probe our defenses," Gen. Glen D. VanHerck, commander of NORAD, said in the statement.

"This year, we've conducted more than a dozen intercepts, the most in recent years. The importance of our continued efforts to project air defense operations in and through the north has never been more apparent," VanHerck said.

In June, NORAD aircraft intercepted four Russian planes entering the ADIZ.

F-22 planes, with assistance from KC-135 air refuelers and E-3 Airborne Warning and Control System, intercepted the Russian planes as they came within 65 nautical miles of the Aleutian island chain off the coast of Alaska.


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Microsoft defends Fortnite maker in Apple fight
New York (AFP) Aug 24, 2020
Microsoft came to the defense of the maker of video game sensation Fortnite on Sunday, saying in a court filing that Apple's moves to cut off the company from programming tools would hurt other game creators and players as well. Epic Games is locked in a legal battle with Apple after trying to dodge commission payments due to the tech giant, prompting the iPhone maker to pull Fortnite from its online store. Apple also threatened to cut off Epic's access to its programming tools needed to maintai ... read more

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