According to RIA Novosti news agency, the Russian Air Force could have the first six of 20 upgraded Su-24 tactical bombers next week. The other 14 would follow “in the near future,” according to a spokesman. Moscow expects eventually to replace the 1970s-vintage Su-24 with new Su-34 fighter-bombers. Meanwhile, the news agency reports that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s effort to reinvigorate its strategic bomber patrols, begun in late summer, has produced 70 flights. According to Maj. Gen. Pavel Androsov, head of strategic aviation for the Russian Air Force, some 120 NATO aircraft launched to escort the Russian bombers, covering almost all their patrols. (Read more on the Russia front in this month’s “A Czar in the Making.”)
The defense intelligence community has tried three times in the past decade to build a “common intelligence picture”—a single data stream providing the information that commanders need to make decisions about the battlefield. The first two attempts failed. But officials say things are different today.