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Aug 19, 2007
Talking tough, playing tough
BARING HIS TORSO, Russian President Vladimir Putin, 54, poses for photographs while fishing in the headwaters of the Yenisey River in the Tuva region last week. Other photos showed him riding a horse near the foothills of the Western Sayan Mountains. -- PHOTOS: AP, AFP
MOSCOW - IN YET another display of a more muscular foreign policy, President Vladimir Putin has announced that Russia is reviving the regular long-range air patrols that ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The flights are necessary to protect Russia because 'other states', an allusion to the US and its allies, continue patrols of their own, he said on national television.

In the first flight, 14 bombers and six supporting airplanes took off at midnight on Friday and were flying over the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and the North Pole, said a Russian Defence Ministry statement.

The news followed earlier sightings of Russian patrols near Guam and over the North Sea. A US State Department spokesman said it was Russia's decision if 'they want to take some of these old aircraft out of mothballs and get them flying again'.

In a more personal muscle-flexing display earlier last week, Mr Putin, 54, allowed photographers to take shots of him stripped to the waist while fishing in nippy weather in Siberia.

Other holiday snaps had the President in a Marlboro man pose on horseback.

New York Times

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