OIL AND GAS
Russia deploys two bombers to Venezuela for exercises
By Margioni BERMUDEZ and Alexander MARTINEZ
Caracas (AFP) Dec 10, 2018

Two Russian long-range strategic bombers landed in Venezuela Monday for what the government said were air force exercises aimed at strengthening the defense of the leftist-ruled South American country.

General Vladimir Padrino, the Venezuelan defense minister, welcomed about 100 Russian pilots and other personnel after the two TU-160s and two other aircraft landed at the international airport that serves Caracas.

Padrino said the deployment showed "we also are preparing to defend Venezuela to the last inch when necessary."

"This we are going to do with our friends, because we have friends in the world who defend respectful balanced, relations," he said.

The commander of the Russian Airforce's long-range aircraft, General Sergei Ivanovich Kobulash, said the exercises would provide "a profound exchange of experience between pilots and technical staff" from both countries.

- Kremlin visit -

The development follows hot on the heels of a visit to Moscow last week by President Nicolas Maduro during which he had talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who expressed support for his beleaguered socialist government.

Maduro often accuses the United States of plotting against his government, which has overseen the plunge of a once-rich petro state into a severe economic crisis.

Besides the two bombers, the deployment included an An-124 transport plane and an Il-62 passenger plane, according to a Russian military announcement in Moscow.

Padrino noted that Russian aircraft had visited before in 2013, but said their current deployment was part of a "new experience."

He said exercises would be held to "raise the level of interoperability of the aerospace defense systems" of both countries.

It was unclear how long the Russian deployment would last, and Padrino did not provide details about the exercises planned.

In recent years, Venezuela has purchased millions of dollars in military equipment from Russia, he said.

Venezuela acquired 24 Sukhoi-30 Russian fighters and signed a deal to purchase 53 MI-24 helicopter gunships and 100,000 Kalashnikov rifles in 2016.

- 'Psychological warfare' -

Former defense minister Raul Salazar said the exercises with Russia "are part of what is called psychological warfare."

"The purpose is to increase the perception that Venezuela is supported by Russia, China and Belarus, that it has the support of a power, in case another power tries to invade," Salazar told AFP.

Maduro on Sunday said Washington had set in motion a plan to overthrow him, with the support of neighboring Colombia.

"Underway today is an attempt to disrupt the democratic life of Venezuela, coordinated directly from the White House," said Maduro, who claims he was the target of an August 4 drone attack hatched by Venezuela's opposition with the support of the US and Colombian governments.

Caracas' defence minister said "nobody in the world should fear the presence of these strategic fighter bombers. We are builders of peace and not of war."

Padrino added however that other countries in the region had created "political and military imbalances" against which the Venezuelan government could not stand idly by -- an apparent reference to Bogota, which Caracas has accused of harboring US military bases.


Related Links
All About Oil and Gas News at OilGasDaily.com

OIL AND GAS
Oil thieves cause damaging spill in Rio river
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) Dec 10, 2018
Thieves who broke into a pipeline near Rio de Janeiro to steal oil caused a four-kilometer (2.5-mile) spill of crude in waterways that is damaging mangroves and wildlife, the company and a Brazilian biologist said Monday. Transpetro, a pipeline subsidiary of state oil company Petrobras, said it was "a victim of criminal acts through the stealing of oil and derivatives" and was cooperating with authorities in their investigations. It said 60,000 liters (16,000 gallons) of oil had leaked since Sat ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

OIL AND GAS
Navy to commission new Arleigh Burke destroyer USS Thomas Hudner

Raytheon to supply Romania with Patriot missile defense systems

Raytheon's SM-3 IIA successful in ballistic missle defense test

Aerojet Rocketdyne propulsion critical to successful intercept test for SM-3 Block IIA Missile

OIL AND GAS
Boeing receives contract for Harpoon, SLAM-ER missile work

State Department approves HIMARS sale for Poland

Army issues contract for Hawk missile parts for foreign military sales

Russia to deploy new S-400 missiles in Crimea

OIL AND GAS
Using drones to simplify film animation

General Atomics tapped for French MQ-9 drone support

Logos demonstrates Redkite advanced surveillance pod

Drones offer ability to find, ID and count marine megafauna

OIL AND GAS
Boeing tapped by Air Force for jam-resistant satellite comms terminals

Navy nanosatellite launch delayed for further inspection

Rockwell Collins airborne radio certified by NSA

NSA certifies Harris AN/PRC-163 radio for top secret intelligence

OIL AND GAS
Squad X Improves Situational Awareness, Coordination for Dismounted Units

Lockheed tapped for Onyx exoskeleton development, demonstrations

Lockheed Martin Secures US Army Exoskeleton Development Agreement

Barrett to provide .50-caliber sniper rifles to U.S. Army

OIL AND GAS
British middleman hauled to India over chopper scam

Egypt's Sisi opens first arms exhibition in Cairo

Slovak government clashes over largest-ever arms purchase

Finland halts arms sales to Saudi, UAE over Yemen crisis

OIL AND GAS
Pentagon sends flight over Ukraine following Russian naval incident

Ukraine urges 'comprehensive' NATO response to Russia

Xi heads to Portugal as China's influence worries EU partners

NATO treads carefully in Ukraine-Russia sea spat

OIL AND GAS
Pitt chemical engineers develop new theory to build improved nanomaterials

Artificial synapses made from nanowires

How microscopic machines can fail in the blink of an eye

Stealth-cap technology for light-emitting nanoparticles