Kremlin: Russia-US relations at "lowest point" after drone incident over Black Sea

March 15, 2023 Russia-Ukraine news

By Tara Subramaniam, Joshua Berlinger, Adrienne Vogt, Mike Hayes, Leinz Vales, Elise Hammond and Tori B. Powell, CNN

Updated 12:31 a.m. ET, March 16, 2023
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8:05 a.m. ET, March 15, 2023

Kremlin: Russia-US relations at "lowest point" after drone incident over Black Sea

From CNN’s Anna Chernova

A TowFLEXX TF3 aircraft tug hauls an MQ-9 Reaper along a runway at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Command Center, Twentynine Palms, California, on February 16.
A TowFLEXX TF3 aircraft tug hauls an MQ-9 Reaper along a runway at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Command Center, Twentynine Palms, California, on February 16. (Staff Sgt. Kristin West/US Air Force)

Relations between Russia and the US are at their “lowest point” and in a “deplorable state,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists Wednesday after the US military said a Russian fighter jet forced a US Air Force drone to crash in the Black Sea.

According to Peskov, Russian President Vladimir Putin was briefed on the incident, but there was no contact at the highest level between Moscow and Washington.

Peskov added that “Russia did not refuse constructive dialogue, and is not refusing it now.” 

He pointed to a Russian Defense Ministry statement published Tuesday claiming that there was no physical contact between the aircraft.

“I suggest that you focus on the statement of the Ministry of Defense, which clearly states that no weapons were used, and there was no physical contact,” Peskov said.

The drone was conducting routine operations in international airspace on Tuesday when it was “intercepted and hit by a Russian aircraft, resulting in a crash and complete loss of the MQ-9,” Air Force Gen. James B. Hecker, commander of US Air Forces Europe and Air Forces Africa, said in a statement. 

The Russian ambassador to the US said Russia does not want “confrontation” with the US, but "as we see it, American aircraft have no business being near the Russian border."  

The incident marks the first time Russian and US military aircraft have come into direct physical contact since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine just over a year ago and is likely to increase tensions between the two nations, with the US calling Russia’s actions “reckless, environmentally unsound and unprofessional.”

CNN’s Oren Liebermann, Jennifer Hansler, Haley Britzky and Natasha Bertrand contributed reporting to this post.

7:53 a.m. ET, March 15, 2023

Drone forced down over Black Sea may never be recovered, spokesperson for National Security Council says

From CNN's Adrienne Vogt

The drone that the US military said was forced down over the Black Sea by a Russian fighter jet has not been recovered — and it may never be, according to John Kirby, coordinator for strategic communications at the National Security Council.

"I'm not sure that we're going to be able to recover it. I mean, where it fell into the Black Sea, very, very deep water. We're still assessing whether there can be any recovery effort mounted. There may not be," Kirby told CNN.

"We did the best we could to minimize any intelligence value that might come from somebody else getting their hands on that drone," he added.

When pressed further, Kirby said, "I certainly can't speak for Russian efforts or what they may or may not be trying to take off the surface of the water. I can just tell you that we're still assessing that situation ourselves." 

One of the Russian jets intentionally flew in front of and dumped fuel on the unmanned drone several times, a statement from US European Command said. The aircraft then hit the propeller of the drone, prompting US forces to bring the MQ-9 drone down in international waters.

Kirby reiterated it is "not uncommon" for Russian jets to try to intercept or harass US drones.

The Russian Ministry of Defense has denied the Russian jet had come into contact with the drone in a statement on Tuesday, saying the fighter jets “scrambled to identify the intruder” after detecting it over the Black Sea, adding that the drone “went into an unguided flight with a loss of altitude.”

Kirby said on Wednesday morning: "First of all, they don't belong in Ukraine. Secondly, they certainly don't belong in Crimea. And we were flying, again, well outside of the airspace that was, that's claimed by Ukraine or any other country. The Black Sea doesn't belong to Russia. ... We're going to continue to operate, again, in complete in accordance with international law."

7:48 a.m. ET, March 15, 2023

Missile hits Kharkiv, according to spokesperson for regional prosecutor

From CNN’s Dennis Lapin in Kyiv 

Ukrainian residents stand amid debris after a Russian missile strike in the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine, on March 15.
Ukrainian residents stand amid debris after a Russian missile strike in the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine, on March 15. (Sergey Bobok/AFP/Getty Images)

An S-300 missile hit the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Wednesday morning, a spokesperson for the regional prosecutor told Ukrainian public broadcaster Suspilne.

“At 10:20 a S-300 missile hit a residential area in Kharkiv's Shevchenkivskyi district,” said the spokesperson, Dmytro Chubenko.

He added that there had been no reports of injuries. 

More on Russian strikes: Last week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that more than 40 missiles had hit Kharkiv since the beginning of the year.

"Only since the beginning of this year – in less than two-and-a-half months – over 40 enemy missiles have already struck Kharkiv," Zelensky said, calling the resulting “ruins, debris, shell holes in the ground” a self-portrait of Russia.

7:01 a.m. ET, March 15, 2023

Finland's president will visit Turkey to discuss Nordic country's NATO bid 

From CNN's Niamh Kennedy in London

Finland's President Sauli Niinisto attends a briefing ahead of a NATO summit in Madrid, Spain, on June 28.
Finland's President Sauli Niinisto attends a briefing ahead of a NATO summit in Madrid, Spain, on June 28. (Juan Medina/Reuters)

Finnish President Sauli Niinistö will visit Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan later this week to discuss the Nordic country's application to join NATO.

The visit, at the invitation of Erdogan, will take place Thursday and Friday, the Turkish presidency said Wednesday. 

Niinistö will first visit earthquake-affected areas in southeastern Turkey and then head to Istanbul for talks, the Finnish presidency said in a statement.

Some context: Turkey's concern about Sweden and Finland’s potential accession to NATO centers mostly on what the Turkish government claims are security grounds.

Turkey claims that both countries, though particularly Sweden, are harboring militants from the banned Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), a designated terror group in Turkey, Sweden, the United States and Europe.

Erdogan says he would like these individuals to be extradited; Sweden has made clear this won’t happen. 

In late February, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said that although Turkey had expressed some concerns about both Sweden and Finland's applications to join NATO, it was predominantly concerned by Sweden's application. 

Stoltenberg has repeatedly called Finland and Sweden's accession a "top priority" for the alliance, calling on Hungary and Turkey to ratify both countries' applications soon.

5:51 a.m. ET, March 15, 2023

British and German fighter jets intercept Russian aircraft near Estonian airspace

From CNN's Jessie Gretener in London

RAF and German Air Force Typhoons intercept a Russian aircraft in their first joint NATO air policing scramble in the handout image dated March 15.
RAF and German Air Force Typhoons intercept a Russian aircraft in their first joint NATO air policing scramble in the handout image dated March 15. (UK Ministry of Defence)

British and German fighter jets jointly intercepted a Russian aircraft near Estonian airspace on Tuesday, according to the UK Ministry of Defense. 

The ministry said Royal Air Force (RAF) typhoon jets from the 140 Expeditionary Air Wing worked with German typhoon jets to escort a Russian IL78 Midas air-to-air refueling aircraft after it failed to respond to air traffic control in Estonia. 

The Russian plane was flying between St. Petersburg and Kaliningrad, a Russian exclave that sits between Poland and Lithuania along the Baltic Sea.

While such interceptions are a routine NATO mission, it was the RAF’s first joint NATO air policing interception alongside a German air force typhoon.

4:31 a.m. ET, March 15, 2023

Russia to hold joint military exercises with China and Iran, Beijing says

From CNN's Beijing bureau

A handout picture made available by the Iranian Army official website on January, 21 2022, shows Iranian, Russia and Chinese warships during a joint military drill in the Indian ocean.
A handout picture made available by the Iranian Army official website on January, 21 2022, shows Iranian, Russia and Chinese warships during a joint military drill in the Indian ocean. (Iranian Army office/AFP/Getty Images)

China, Iran and Russia will begin joint military exercises in the Gulf of Oman on Wednesday, China's Ministry of Defense said in a statement. 

The drills between the three countries' armies and navies will run through Sunday, the statement said.

The statement said the exercises would build on joint maritime drills between the three nations held in 2019 and 2022.

Remember: China has forged a "no limits" partnership with Russia during Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, with deepening diplomatic and economic ties between the two. Western officials have also previously raised concerns that China may be considering providing Russia with lethal military assistance, an accusation denied by Beijing.

Meanwhile, Moscow's growing defense partnership with Tehran has intensified over the past year as Russia has become increasingly desperate for external military support for its war against Ukraine.

2:38 a.m. ET, March 15, 2023

Analysis: The two biggest 2024 Republican names would mean bad news for Ukraine

Analysis from CNN's Stephen Collinson

Donald Trump, left, and Ron DeSantis.
Donald Trump, left, and Ron DeSantis. (Getty Images)

Russia might be bogged down in its vicious onslaught on Ukraine, but President Vladimir Putin is winning big elsewhere — in the Republican presidential primary.

The two highest-polling potential GOP nominees — former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — are making clear that if they make it to the White House, Ukraine’s lifeline of US weapons and ammunition would be in danger and the war could end on Putin’s terms. Their stands underscore rising antipathy among grassroots conservatives to the war and President Joe Biden’s marshaling of the West to bankroll Kyiv’s resistance to Putin’s unprovoked invasion.

“The death and destruction must end now!” Trump wrote in replies to a questionnaire from Fox News’ Tucker Carlson about the war and US involvement. DeSantis, answering the same questions, countered with his most unequivocal signal yet that he’d downgrade US help for Ukraine if he wins the presidency. “We cannot prioritize intervention in an escalating foreign war over the defense of our own homeland,” he wrote.

Trump’s warnings that only he can stop World War III and DeSantis’ main argument that saving Ukraine is not a core US national security interest will likely gain even more traction following one of the most alarming moments yet in the war on Tuesday. The apparent downing of a US drone by a Russian fighter jet over the Black Sea was a step closer to the scenario that everyone has dreaded since the war erupted a year ago — a direct clash between US and Russian forces.

Read the full analysis here.

2:32 a.m. ET, March 15, 2023

DeSantis saying Ukraine support is not "vital" national interest sparks backlash in GOP

From CNN's Jack Forrest,

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, on Mach 5.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, on Mach 5. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Several key Republican senators on Tuesday pushed back against Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ recent comments that US support for Ukraine is not a “vital” national interest, exposing a key intraparty fault line ahead of the 2024 election.

“To say this doesn’t matter is to say that war crimes don’t matter,” South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham told CNN, adding that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s aggression will “go beyond Ukraine” and that “if you don’t get that, you’re not listening to what he’s saying.”

On Monday, DeSantis, who has not yet announced a presidential bid, said in a statement responding to a questionnaire from Fox News’ Tucker Carlson that “while the US has many vital national interests … becoming further entangled in a territorial dispute between Ukraine and Russia is not one of them.”

“We cannot prioritize intervention in an escalating foreign war over the defense of our own homeland, especially as tens of thousands of Americans are dying every year from narcotics smuggled across our open border and our weapons arsenals critical for our own security are rapidly being depleted,” DeSantis wrote in response to Carlson’s request for 2024 GOP presidential candidates to provide their views on the war in Ukraine.

Read the full story here.

11:58 p.m. ET, March 14, 2023

A Russian jet forced down a US drone over international waters. Here's what you need to know

From CNN staff

A Russian fighter jet forced down a US Air Force drone over the Black Sea on Tuesday after damaging the propeller of a MQ-9 Reaper drone, according to US officials. The drone was flying over international waters when one of two Russian jets intentionally flew in front of and dumped fuel on the unmanned drone several times, according to the US European Command. 

Russia has pushed back, denying that its jets came "into contact" with the drone. The Russian Ambassador to the US said Russia does not want “confrontation” with the US but "as we see it, American aircraft have no business being near the Russian border."

Here's what to know:

  • US-Russia drone intervention: A Russian jet downed a US drone over the Black Sea. Aircraft from both countries have operated over the Black Sea during the course of the war, but this is the first known such interaction, a potentially dangerous escalation at a critical time in the fighting. The incident prompted US officials to express "strong objections" to diplomats. Pentagon Press Secretary Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder called it "uncommon and unfortunate and unsafe." President Joe Biden and US allies have been briefed, according to the White House and the Pentagon.
  • Russian response: Moscow has pushed back, denying that its fighter jets came "into contact" with the US drone. Russian Ambassador to the US Anatoly Antonov said Russia does not want a "confrontation" with the US, but the craft was too close to the Russian border. The drone has not been recovered, a spokesperson for US European Command said.
  • Latest from the front lines: Russian strikes across the Donetsk region have killed at least three people. In Bakhmut, social media posts appear to confirm fighting around the AZOM metallurgical plant in the north of the city. The intensity of shelling in the city has increased, a Ukrainian soldier said on Ukrainian television. Wagner units appear to be making limited advances but remain well short of encircling Bakhmut. In southern Ukraine, the Ukrainian military said it destroyed four Russian missiles that were headed toward Odesa.
  • Update on Western aid: Ukrainian soldiers have nearly completed their training on Leopard 2 battle tanks in Munster, Germany, according to a spokesperson for the special training command. Once the training is finished, Germany can deploy the Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, the spokesperson said. Germany has so far vowed to supply Ukraine with 18 of the latest A6 model Leopard 2 tanks. Additionally, the Netherlands announced it will send two minesweepers, drone detection radar systems and ferrying and bridge-building systems to Ukraine, according to Dutch Defense Minister Kajsa Ollongren.
  • War crime investigation: The Russian government has said it does not recognize the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court, after the court declared its plans to open two war crimes cases against Russia, according to The New York Times and Reuters.