Russia admits error after pilot ‘thought he had permission to shoot down RAF spy plane’
A Russian pilot tried to shoot down an RAF spy plane believing he had been given permission to fire, according to a report.
Russia blamed a “technical malfunction” for causing the incident over the Black Sea on September 29 last year.
But intercepted communications suggest the pilot fired after receiving an ambiguous command from a Russian ground station.
The RAF plane had been flying a surveillance mission in international airspace when it encountered two Russian SU-27 fighter jets.
A western defence source told the BBC the words the two pilots received were to the effect of “you have the target”.
One interpreted this as permission to shoot but the other did not, swearing at his wingman when he fired the first missile, according to the report.
Sources said the unclear language indicates a high degree of unprofessionalism by those involved and led to a fight between the two pilots.
One reportedly launched an air-to-air missile, which failed to lock on to its target.
Despite his comrade remonstrating with him, he then released another missile which fell from the wing, suggesting the weapon either malfunctioned or the launch was aborted, according to the report.
The RAF RC-135 Rivet Joint aircraft has sensors to intercept communications, and crew would have been able to listen to the incident, but these details will not be made public.
An Ministry of Defence spokesman said: “Following an incident last September between an RAF Rivet Joint aircraft and two Russian Su-27 fighter jets over the Black Sea, the former defence secretary informed the House of Commons within three weeks of the event occurring, in the interest of transparency and safety.
“Our intent has always been to protect the safety of our operations, avoid unnecessary escalation and inform the public and international community.
Then defence secretary Ben Wallace made a statement in the Commons following the incident, telling MPs it showed the Russian military were “not beyond making the wrong calculation or indeed deciding that the rules don’t apply to them”.
He added: “We welcome Russia’s acknowledgement this was in international airspace, and the UK has conducted regular sorties with the RAF Rivet Joint in international airspace over the Black Sea since 2019 and we will continue to do so.”
Press Association – Nina Lloyd