Winter in Unalaska by Sam Zmolek
Your voice in the Aleutians.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
The KUCB Newsroom provides newscasts Monday through Thursday at noon and 5 PM on KUCB Radio. You can find many of our local news stories here.

Coast Guard spots Chinese and Russian military ships together in Bering Sea

Courtesy of U.S. Coast Guard
A Coast Guard Cutter Kimball crewmember observing a foreign vessel in the Bering Sea. Sept. 19, 2022.

A Coast Guard crew encountered a Chinese guided missile cruiser in the Bering Sea last week.

The Coast Guard Cutter Kimball was on a routine patrol on Sept. 19, when the vessel encountered the Renhai CG 101 about 75 miles north of Kiska Island, in the Western Aleutians, according to a Coast Guard statement Monday morning.

The statement said the Coast Guard crew identified two more Chinese naval vessels and four Russian naval vessels, including a Russian Federation Navy destroyer.

The ships were lined up together in some kind of group formation with the Chinese cruiser. The statement didn’t specify what kind of exercise they might be involved in. However, the ships were identified within the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone, an area up to 200 nautical miles offshore, where the U.S. has jurisdiction over natural resources.

The Coast Guard crew saw the group of vessels disperse, said the statement.

The foreign formation hasn’t broken any international rules or norms, according to Seventeenth Coast Guard District Commander Rear Adm. Nathan Moore. Still, he said the Kimball “will meet presence-with-presence to ensure there are no disruptions to U.S. interests in the maritime environment around Alaska.”

As of Monday afternoon, Coast Guard representatives hadn’t responded to questions about what the vessels were doing in the area.

Kimball is a 418-foot legend-class national security cutter homeported in Honolulu, Hawaii.

A year ago, Coast Guard cutters deployed to the Bering Sea and North Pacific Ocean encountered four Chinese warships, including a group traveling approximately 50 miles off the Aleutian Island chain.

Hailing from Southwest Washington, Maggie moved to Unalaska in 2019. She's dabbled in independent print journalism in Oregon and completed her Master of Arts in English Studies at Western Washington University — where she also taught Rhetoric and Composition courses.
Related Content
  • The U.S. Coast Guard medevaced a crew member from a large container ship Friday, at a rendezvous point near Dutch Harbor. The 48-year-old man was on board the YM Uniformity, a 1,093-foot container ship from Taiwan. The ship was more than a thousand nautical miles southwest of Dutch Harbor when the crew called the Coast Guard to report the crewmember was experiencing chest pain.
  • Aleutian Airways has been granted approval from the Federal Aviation Administration to start charter and scheduled air service to Unalaska. That’s according to a statement released by the new regional airline Wednesday morning. While charters will start immediately, the company says it will announce scheduled routes within the next two weeks. The news comes just one week after the company ran a successful test flight of its Saab 2000 aircraft to Unalaska’s Tom Madsen airport.
  • A historic anchor showed up at the dock in Unalaska on Saturday. A cargo ship had pulled it up while in Bristol Bay for the salmon fishery. Now someone in Unalaska has to figure out when and where that anchor came from, and how to preserve it.