Russian pilots who chased US drone awarded medals

Moscow: Two Russian military pilots, who had scrambled to deal with a US Air Force MQ-9 Reaper drone with the incident that ended with the US craft plunging into the Black Sea earlier this month, were awarded state decorations during a ceremony on Wednesday.

Major Vasiliy Vavilov and Major Sergey Popov, who were previously not identified by the Russian Defence Ministry, were both presented with an Order of Courage by Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu at a ceremony where several Russian service members were honoured for their accomplishments, RT reported.

The pilots “prevented a violation by the US MQ-9 drone of the border of a zone of the temporary regime for (the restricted) use of airspace established for the special military operation” in Ukraine, the ministry said.

Vavilov described his actions as “manoeuvres aimed at forcing it (the drone) to abandon its mission,” in a media interview on the sidelines of Wednesday’s ceremony.

The incident occurred last week, and resulted in the US and Russia trading accusations. The Pentagon claimed Russian pilots engaged in reckless flying in international airspace and that one of them clipped the propeller of the unmanned aircraft, causing it to go down.

The US released footage purportedly shot by the drone, showing a Sukhoi Su-27 fighter jet buzzing over it and apparently ejecting fuel in the process. The US military stressed the environmental impact allegedly caused by the incident.

Russia denied hitting the drone or using weapons against it, and said the US aircraft was flying with its transponder switched off in a no-go zone declared by the Russian military.

Russia’s Ambassador to the US, Anatoly Antonov contended that a potentially armed NATO drone “had no business” flying near the Russian border.

The Order of Courage is a prestigious decoration, but not exclusive to military personnel or even to Russian nationals. For example, NASA astronaut Nick Hague was given the award for his actions during the launch of the Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft in 2018, and so was Russian cosmonaut Aleksey Ovchinin, who was the second person on board.

–IANS

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