Russia to begin artillery firing near Norway’s Grense Jakobselv

Norway’s northernmost military Observation Post (No. 247) on the coast to the Barents Sea. Sredny Peninsula visible in the horizon. Russia’s artillery shooting will take place in the waters in between Grense Jakobselv and Sredny. (Thomas Nilsen/The Independent Barents Observer)

The area closed for shipping and aviation is at the nearest just 4 nautical miles from where Russia’s land border with Norway meets the maritime border into the Barents Sea.

Norwegian soldiers at the observation outpost No. 247 on the mountain just above Grense Jakobselv will have panorama view to the shootings.

The announced coastal warning (PRIPs) from the Port Administration for Northwestern Russia in Murmansk is valid for June 4 to 6 and is headlined “Varanger fjord” and detailed “Artillery firing”.

The Varanger fjord marks the maritime border between the two countries.

Here, the maritime border was agreed in 2007 (The Varanger fjord agreement) and further north, the delimitation agreement for the Barents Sea and Arctic Ocean from 2010 (valid from 2011).

The Norwegian Coast Guard vessel “KV Fram” is patrolling the maritime border areas of the Barents Sea. Here with Grense Jakobselv and Russia in the horizon. (Thomas Nilsen/The Independent Barents Observer)

Neither the NOTAM (Notice to Airmen) nor the coastal warnings tells if the artillery shootings will be conducted by navy warships of the Northern Fleet or by FSB Coast Guard. The latter has in recent years frequently sailed close to Norwegian shores outside Grense Jakobselv.

The Sredny, inside the Fishermen Peninsula, is a well-known training area for coastal forces of the Northern Fleet. Pechenga is home to both the 200th Motorized Rifle Brigade and the 61st Naval Infantry Brigade.

The Northern Fleet currently have five other areas north of the Kola Peninsula with live-shootings from this weekend into next week. On Friday, also the airspace over the Kola Bay, from Severomorsk north to the Barents Sea is closed. So are two large areas on land, from the town of Kola towards Russia’s border with Finnish Lapland.

Currently, the Northern Fleet engages eleven surface ships, submarines and support vessels as part of exercise Kumzha-2024.

Related stories from around the North:

Canada: Canada pledges billions for defence, falls short of NATO’s 2%, CBC News

Denmark: Denmark’s Arctic, North Atlantic focus: Canada among new defence attaché posts, Eye on the Arctic

Faroe Islands:Finnish Defence Minister announces €300 million investment in Lapland defence

Finland: US, Norwegian forces in Lapland for rapid reinforcement exercise, The Independent Barents Observer

Norway: Oslo looks to Brussels for strengthened security and defence, CBC News 

Russia: Intensified GPS jamming is side effect of Russia’s self-protection of Kola bases, The Independent Barents Observer

Sweden: Swedes must mentally prepare for war, says military top brass, Radio Sweden

United States: White House releases U.S. Arctic strategy implementation plan, Eye on the Arctic

Thomas Nilsen, The Independent Barents Observer

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

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