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Russia Navy Boss Urges Submarine Navigation Agreement

Russian Navy commander-in-chief Adm. Vladimir Masorin.
by Staff Writers
Moscow (RIA Novosti) Mar 06, 2007
Russia has called for an international agreement on the safety of submarine navigation to be signed soon, the Navy commander-in-chief said Monday. "We have an agreement with 14 countries to prevent incidents at sea covering territory outside our waters. Our Navy meticulously observes it. We would now like to sign agreements to ensure submarine navigational safety" Adm. Vladimir Masorin said. But he said the United States was reluctant to sign.

He also said the Russian Navy will continue its participation in the NATO-led anti-terrorist Operation Active Endeavor in the Mediterranean.

"Our Navy cannot exist on its own. We need to integrate into international structures," he said.

Adm. Masorin said Russian warships will call at U.S. ports later this year as part of the FRUKUS exercise.

FRUKUS is a multinational exercise, which takes place in the eastern Atlantic Ocean and includes naval forces from France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States.

"It is very important that the United States does not forget that Russia has a navy," he said, adding the Russian Navy command had invited the U.S. Navy to exchange submarine visits, but the U.S. side declined the proposal.

Source: RIA Novosti

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China Ballistic Missile Submarine Force Growing
Washington (AFP) March 02, 2007
China is conducting sea trials of the first of five new nuclear-powered submarines armed with longer-range ballistic missiles, according to a US naval intelligence report made public Friday. The sea trials are part of a broader push by China to check US naval power in the western Pacific with a more modern fleet of nuclear-powered ballistic missile and attack submarines, the Office of Naval Intelligence said.







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