FW: Open Skies Treaty: Second Russian Observation Mission in the United States

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  Something I did not of.  Who knows of this?

BOB FLETCHER
US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS
MILITARY DESIGN SECTION
10th FLOOR S.W.
SACRAMENTO DISTRICT
1325 J STREET, SACRAMENTO
CALIFORNIA, 95814-2922
Phone   (916) 557-7235


-----Original Message-----
From: statelists@xxxxxxxxx [mailto:statelists@xxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, September 16, 2004 3:32 PM
To: DOSFACTS@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Open Skies Treaty: Second Russian Observation Mission in the
United States


  Fact Sheet
  Office of the Spokesman
  Washington, DC
  September 16, 2004



  Open Skies Treaty: Second Russian Observation Mission in the United States


  During the week of September 20, 2004, the Russian Federation and Republic
of
  Belarus will conduct their second Open Skies Treaty observation mission
over
  the territory of the United States. The Open Skies Treaty entered into
force on
  January 1, 2002. Since entry into force, this is the second observation
mission
  the U.S. is hosting under the Treaty. To date, the U.S. has conducted
thirteen
  observation missions over the territories of the Russian Federation and
  Republic of Belarus. In June, Russia and Belarus conducted the first of
their
  two observation missions over the U.S. this year.

    * The Russian TU-154 is an unarmed aircraft that was recently certified
in
      accordance with Treaty provisions. It will arrive at Dulles
International
      Airport (a designated point of entry into the U.S.), and the mission
will
      commence from McConnell Air Force Base, Kansas.

    * A U.S. escort team from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA)
will
      accompany the Russian team throughout the mission, including on-board
the
      aircraft during the observation flight.

    * The Russian aircraft is equipped with optical cameras. The U.S. will
      receive a copy of the imagery collected during the mission. Other Open
      Skies States Parties may also purchase copies of the imagery from
Russia.

    * The Russian team will negotiate a mission route of up to 4,800
kilometers.
      The Treaty allows Russia, as the observing Party, to image any point
on the
      territory of the U.S. along the agreed flight plan.

  For further information, please see fact sheets on the Open Skies Treaty
at:
  www.state.gov/t/ac or www.dtra.mil

  2004/991

  [End]

  Released on September 16, 2004

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