By  — @natebro21 —  See Comments
Region: Published: May 31, 2015  Updated: May 31, 2015 at 3:06 am EST

As tensions mount between China and the US, and Russia and the US the ever growing concern of the start of world war 3 draws closer and closer. Recently and this is breaking news: Russians claim aircraft scrambled to head off ‘aggressive’ US destroyer in Black Sea.

Source:


However now it appears that this also has happened earlier in the day according to Sputnik News:

Russian Navy jets forced a US Navy ship into the eastern Black Sea after it was noticed heading into Russia’s territorial waters.

Russian Navy Su-24 jets forced US Navy destroyer USS Ross to go into neutral waters in the Black Sea, a source in Crimea’s security forces told RIA Novosti.

The US Navy ship was noticed heading directly toward Russian waters after leaving the Romanian port of Costanta. The incident comes on the same day as fugitive Georgian ex-leader Mikheil Saakashvili’s appointment as governor of Ukraine’s Black Sea-bordering Odessa region.

“The ship’s crew acted provocatively and aggressively, which caused alarm among operators of monitoring stations and Black Sea Fleet ships carrying out assignments in the Black Sea. Scrambled Su-24 attack jets demonstrated a readiness to forcibly suppress border violations and defend the country’s interest,” the source said.

According to the source, Russian Black Sea Navy ships are constantly monitoring Russian territorial waters and are ready to suppress any violations.

Guided-missile destroyer USS Ross (DDG 71)

“It seems that the Americans did not forget the April 2014 incident when one Su-24 actually shut down all equipment on the new USS Donald Cook American destroyer with anti-missile system elements,” the source added.Russian Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov said that US missile ships near Russian borders pose a danger to strategic stability on Saturday, while at the Shangri-La Dialogue security summit in Singapore.

Source: Russian Jets Force US Navy Destroyer Away From Territorial Waters / Sputnik International