Russia shows off Arctic military power

The drill this week included landing amphibious assault forces supported by choppers and artillery fire from the destroyer “Admiral Levhenko” – the lead warship on the Arctic voyage. (Northern Fleet press service)

Hundreds of Northern Fleet soldiers are killed in Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine. Others are sent on exercise to the northernmost tip of the Eurasian continent.

How the mock enemy managed to get to Cape Chelyuskin says official press statements nothing about. The cape is the northernmost tip of the Taymyr Peninsula, also known to be the northernmost coastline of the Eurasian mainland.

Here, between icebergs and frozen tundra, the soldiers of Russia’s Northern Fleet countered an imagined illegal armed sabotage reconnaissance group. The drill this week included landing amphibious assault forces supported by choppers and artillery fire from the destroyer “Admiral Levhenko” – the lead warship on the Arctic voyage.

September expeditions with exercises along the Northern Sea Route have been an annual highlight for the Russian navy over the last decade. This year, the voyage is supervised by Vice Admiral Oleg Golubev, Deputy Commander of the Northern Fleet.

Armored personnel carriers were brought to shore by “Aleksandr Otrakovsky”, the landing ship that last year sailed side-by-side in the Black Sea with the cruiser “Moskva”. That warship sank after being hit in Putin’s war off the coast of Ukraine earlier this year.

Troops now training Arctic warfare on the top of the world come from the same infantry brigades that have lost hundreds of soldiers on the battlefields in Ukraine since Putin ordered them to invade on February 24th.

Thousands of kilometers from the violent fighting in Ukraine, the soldiers practiced tactical actions to capture the beach and made a five-kilometer march on the permafrost of the peninsula.

The navy ships set out from the Kola Bay on August 10 and have conducted navy drills at Franz Josef Land, near the offshore oil rig Priazlomnaya in the eastern Barents Sea and in the Kara Sea on their way to Severnaya Zemlya and the Laptev Sea where a drill took place at the Kotelny Island last week.

September expeditions with exercises along the Northern Sea Route have been an annual highlight for the Russian navy over the last decade. (Northern Fleet press service)

West poses no threat 

As Russia trained troops in the high Arctic, the Norwegian Prime Minister gave his speech at the UN Security Council meeting in New York. Norway is the only nation that shares both a land border and a maritime border with Russia in the Arctic.

PM Jonas Gahr Støre commented on Moscow’s allegations that Russia is being threatened by the West.

“Let me say as clearly as I can: These allegations are simply not true. There is no military threat against Russia,” Støre said.

The Norwegian PM continued to comment on the war on Ukraine. “If the Russian people, and we know them, could freely express their views, would they have chosen war? I doubt it.”

Related stories from around the North:

Canada: NATO chief tours Arctic defences as Canada comes under pressure, CBC News

Finland: Finland says traffic ‘intensifying’ on border with Russia, The Independent Barents Observer

Norway: Norway formally scraps Russia visa deal, The Independent Barents Observer

Russia: Murmansk Governor: I expect your full support for the mobilization, The Independent Barents Observer

Thomas Nilsen, The Independent Barents Observer

For more news from the Barents region visit The Independent Barents Observer.

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