"The US decision to fly its surveillance drones further south
over the Black Sea after a Russian jet collided with a US drone earlier this
month “definitely limits our ability to gather intelligence” related to the
Ukraine, a senior US military official tells CNN.
Flying drones at greater distances
reduces the quality of intelligence they can gather, a US military official
explained, noting that spy satellites can compensate to some degree but have
shorter times over targets, again reducing effectiveness relative to
surveillance drones.
After the Russian jet collided with a
US Reaper drone earlier this month, the US began flying its surveillance drones
further south and at a higher altitude over the Black Sea than previously,
placing them further away from airspace surrounding the Crimean peninsula and
eastern portions of the Black Sea.
When CNN first reported this change, one US official said
the new routes were part of an effort “to avoid being too provocative,” as the
Biden administration continues to be careful to avoid any incident that could
escalate into a direct conflict with Russian forces. The official said the
drone flights would continue this way “for the time being,” but added there is
already “an appetite” to return to the routes closer to Russian-held territory.
Asked about the new routes’ impact on intelligence
gathering, Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder told CNN, “We’re not
going to discuss missions, routes, or timing of operations. We’re also not
going to discuss intelligence operations other than to say we maintain a robust
ISR capability in the region and beyond.” A spokesperson for the National
Security Council referred questions to the Pentagon.
In the wake of the collision with the US MQ-9 Reaper drone
on March 14, US officials have repeatedly said that the US would continue to
fly in international airspace. However, the new routes place those flights more
than 40 nautical miles from the coast, rather than the 12 nautical miles
normally recognized as the limit of a nation’s airspace.
According to the senior US military official, there is
concern that once the US has moved its flight routes away from areas closer to
the coast, it will be harder to return to them and assert freedom of flight for
US aircraft. The US Navy has not sailed into the Black Sea since December 2021."
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