AT SEA - SEPTEMBER 25, 2011:  In this handout released by the U.S. Navy, the U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Gravely (DDG 107) is underway during the multinational UNITAS Atlantic 53-2012 exercise conducted in the western Caribbean Sea  September 25, 2011 at sea. In a response to a alleged chemical weapons attack on its own people by the Syrian regime the USS Mahan, the USS Barry, the USS Ramage, and the USS Gravely, all Arleigh Burke-class destroyers carrying Tomahawk land-attack missiles, are en route or in position in the eastern Mediterranean for a possible strike on Syrian military assets on August 28, 2013.  (Photo by U.S. Navy via Getty Images)
U.S. destroyer sails by Russian warship
00:53 - Source: CNN

Story highlights

At least six close encounters this year between US and Russian ships, planes

Analysts see the risky maneuvers as a strategy to challenge the U.S., intimidate allies

Washington CNN  — 

The repeated close encounters between Russian and U.S. warships and planes may not be an accident.

That’s the view of analysts who are coming to believe that the risky Russian maneuvers – there have been at least six close calls this year – are part of Vladimir Putin’s strategy aimed at challenging the U.S.’s global position and intimidating its European allies.

“The Russians believe that if they do a show of force, that they achieve results that promote their interests. In this case, it is a certain degree of intimidation,” retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark told CNN.

Clark, who was NATO’s supreme allied commander until 2000, added that it “shows that they (the Russians) are willing to stand up to the United States.”

The Kremlin has been angered lately by NATO’s effort to bolster its eastern flank amid increased Russian military activity in the region.

The Russian-U.S. military episodes have taken place all over the world, from the Pacific Ocean and Mediterranean to the Baltic and Black Seas.

In the most recent incident, a Russian ship last week came within 150 yards of a U.S. Navy vessel, the USS San Jacinto, that was sailing in the eastern Mediterranean. The U.S. Navy described the maneuver in a statement as unsafe, “erratic” and “aggressive.”

A few weeks earlier, the Russian Neustrashimyy-class frigate came within 315 yards of the USS Gravely.

And in April, two Russian fighter jets flew within 30 feet of the USS Donald Cook while it was sailing in the Baltic Sea, an action that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry warned could have led to the jets being shot down.

U.S. officials say Russian warship came dangerously close

Kerry told CNN en Español that “under the rules of engagement, that could have been a shoot-down, so people need to understand that this is serious business.”

Many see the spate of incidents not as accidents but as intentional moves by the Russian president.

Heather Conley, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a DC-based think tank, told CNN after the April incident that Putin is trying to send a message to America’s partners.

“To America’s European allies, the Kremlin is messaging that the U.S. cannot protect them from Russia if Russia wants to do something to them militarily,” she said.

The latest close calls come as the U.S. and NATO take steps to reinforce the alliance’s eastern flank in the days leading up the summit of leaders, to take place in Warsaw, Poland on July 8-9.

Russians “barrell roll” over another U.S. Air Force plane

Last month, NATO announced the alliance would deploy four multinational battalions of about 1,000 troops each to Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland as part of a bid to deter Russia in the wake of Moscow’s intervention in Ukraine and annexation of Crimea in 2014.

The Kremlin has lambasted NATO’s eastern activity and has announced plans to deploy advanced nuclear-capable missiles in its European enclave of Kaliningrad by 2019, according to Reuters.

And Putin warned Finland this week against joining NATO, telling reporters after a meeting with the Finnish president that if the country became part of the Western military bloc, “Do you think we will keep it as it is? Our troops at 1,500 (kilometers, 900 miles) away?”

“Russia of course is trying to push back against the United States wherever it can,” Michael O’Hanlon, senior fellow in foreign policy at the Brookings Institution, told CNN.

But he noted that the strategy poses significant risks.

“When he starts operating planes and ships near our major vessels on the water there is a potential for a major ship disaster,” he said.

RELATED: Russian jets keep buzzing U.S. ships and planes. What can the U.S. do?