March 14, 2023 Updated: March 14, 2023
Gen. David Berger,
Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, testifies at a Senate Armed Services
Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on Dec. 3, 2019. (Saul Loeb/AFP
via Getty Images)
WASHINGTON—U.S. Marine
Corps Gen. David Berger said on March 14 that the Russian downing of a U.S.
drone reflects his “biggest worry.”
“This is my biggest
worry, both there and in the Pacific, is that an aggressive Russia or China
pilot or vessel captain or something gets too close, doesn’t realize where they
are, causes a collision, and it’s 2 in the morning and we’re trying to unpack this
as fast as we can. I really worry about that,” he said at an event at the
National Press Club. “In other words, either intentionally or unintentionally,
things bumping into each other, causing a collision and then two great
nations—powerful nations—trying to sort it out at 2 in the morning.”
U.S. European Command
announced on Tuesday that two Russian Su-27 aircraft intercepted an unmanned
MQ-9 aircraft, which collects intelligence, over the Black Sea. In response,
the United States shot down the drone into the sea.
“Our MQ-9 aircraft was
conducting routine operations in international airspace when it was intercepted
and hit by a Russian aircraft, resulting in a crash and complete loss of the
MQ-9,” said U.S. Air Force Gen. James Hecker, the commander of U.S. Air Forces
Europe and Air Forces Africa, in a statement. “In fact, this unsafe and
unprofessional act by the Russians nearly caused both aircraft to crash.”
Berger said that what
happened exemplifies the United States not being able to get answers from
adversarial counterparts in light of such incidents.
“Even more challenging,
because right now on our side—on, let’s say, the PRC—normally we would have
communications with the PLAN, their military,” he said, referring to the
country’s official name, the People’s Republic of China, and China’s military,
the People’s Liberation Army Navy. “It doesn’t exist right now. They won’t
communicate with us.”
Berger said the normal
channels through which the two countries might diffuse a situation have been
suspended.
“I worry that something
will happen at 2 in the morning and we can’t talk to our counterpart to say,
‘What the heck was that about?’ I worry, I do.”
Following the event,
Berger told The Epoch Times that the incident does not merit activating Article
5 of the NATO charter, which says that an attack on one member nation is an
attack on all members. He said this is because the act was “over water, which isn’t
NATO territory,” and that it happened in “international airspace over
international water.”
He said he was not aware
of any other threats from Russia in light of the incident.
https://www.theepochtimes.com/us-general-on-russia-downing-us-drone-my-biggest-worry_5122504.html
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