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Russia: U.S. Using Cold War Tactics
Gay rights pioneer Lilli Vincenz, 74, poses in her home in Arlington, Va., Thursday, May 10, 2012. At the birthplace of the gay rights movement, patrons at New York City's Stonewall Inn said they felt like they were living history. In Wyoming, the mother of a gay man beaten to death said words couldn't express her gratitude. The president's declaration that he supports gay marriage may have lacked the urgency of Kennedy's push for the Civil Rights Act, or the force and finality of the Emancipation Proclamation, but in places key to the history of gay rights, it's being greeted as a major milestone. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) (Jacquelyn Martin)
Two Russian fighters were scrambled to track the U-2 spy plane as it flew 12 to 19 miles from the Russian border Saturday, the Defense Ministry said, according to Russian news agencies.
The U.S. Embassy said it had no comment.
Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Nikolai Deryabin was quoted as saying that air defense systems locked onto the American plane as it began its flight over the former Soviet republic of Georgia, an impoverished Caucasus Mountains nation that Washington has identified as a possible haven for Islamic terrorists, including militants linked to Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network.
"To prevent the possible breach of the Russian border, two destroyers were sent up," Deryabin was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying.
The Russian Foreign Ministry later said that Saturday's flight by the American plane followed two earlier incidents on March 7 and Feb. 27, prompting Saturday's statement of protest.
"The U.S. is known to explain that the task of such flights is to spot and identify international terrorists and their bases," the ministry said in a statement.
"However we have already conveyed to the American side our concern in connection with such intelligence activity near Russia's border, which can hardly be of real use for the purpose of fighting international terrorism and is more reminiscent of a practice associated with 'Cold War' times."
The Foreign Ministry said that the flights "provoke additional tension in a region that is sensitive from the viewpoint of Russia's security interests."
Russia also said the intelligence gathering was "even more out of place" in light of the recent tension between Washington and Moscow over the U.S.-led attack on Iraq, which the Kremlin strongly opposes.
Georgia is eager to bind itself closer to the West and rebuffed Russian offers to rid the region of militants. Last year, it accepted Washington's help in forming its own anti-terrorist units to fight the militants.
Russian President Vladimir Putin did not object to the U.S. training, which is continuing. But Russian-Georgian relations have been tense, particularly over the Kremlin's concerns that Georgian efforts to round up the militants have failed to yield significant results.
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