Kyiv Post
Sweden Intercepts 2 Russian Tu-22M3 Bombers Over Baltic Sea
The intercept was part of NATO’s routine Air Policing mission, but Stockholm’s recent warning that Moscow could seize a Baltic island to test NATO’s resolve has underscored the risk of escalation. Ma
The intercept was part of NATO’s routine Air Policing mission, but Stockholm’s recent warning that Moscow could seize a Baltic island to test NATO’s resolve has underscored the risk of escalation.
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This handout video grab released by the Russian Defence Ministry on February 9, 2022 shows a Tupolev Tu-22M3 Backfire strategic bomber (L) and a Su-35 multirole supermaneuverable fighter flying during joint exercises of the armed forces of Russia and Belarus as part of an inspection of the Union State’s Response Force. (Photo by Handout / Russian Defence Ministry / AFP)
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The Swedish Air Force said it had intercepted two Russian Tu-22M3 strategic bombers over the Baltic Sea on Monday.
In an X update , it said the bombers were escorted by two Russian fighter jets, adding that the mission was “coordinated with NATO allies” as part of the alliance’s routine Quick Reaction Alert (QRA) mission.
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“Swedish QRA fighter jets intercepted two Russian Tu-22M3 strategic bombers over the Baltic Sea today. The bombers were escorted by two Russian fighter jets, and the interception was coordinated with NATO allies,” the update says.
Local outlet the Sweden Herald said Sweden scrambled two JAS 39 Gripen fighters to shadow the Russian bombers when the latter were discovered at around 10 a.m. on Monday.
Lieutenant Colonel Robert Krznaric, the Swedish Air Force’s chief of operations, told another outlet the bombers were spotted northeast of Gotland Island after entering through the Gulf of Finland, passing between Sweden and the Baltic states, continuing south to Bornholm, and then turning back toward Russia.
The Tu-22M3 is frequently used by Moscow to launch Kh-22 missiles over Ukraine. The purpose of their latest flights over Sweden remains unclear.
Sweden’s chief of defense has recently warned that Russia might capture an island in the Baltic Sea – one of the thousands scattered in the region – to test NATO’s response.
The update followed similar reports from the Royal Norwegian Air Force, also known as the Luftforsvaret, which said on Friday that it had intercepted two Russian maritime spy planes – an Il-38 and a Tupolev Tu-142 – within the past week.
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In its update, the Luftforsvaret said it had carried out 19 QRA missions and identified 28 aircraft thus far in 2026.
The QRA is part of NATO’s Air Policing mission, involving routine encounters dating back at least to the 1950s, when military aircraft – from fighter formations to intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) platforms – enter another nation’s air defense identification zone (ADIZ), a charted buffer area meant to prevent unwanted peacetime confrontations.
Leo Chiu is a journalist and editor based in Eastern Europe since 2015. He has witnessed two presidential elections in Belarus and traveled widely to conflict zones and contested regions, producing reporting that bridges the gap between major developments and local realities.