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  2. Air sovereignty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_sovereignty

    A USAF F-15 Eagle fighter after intercepting a Russian Tu-95 near the west coast of Alaska in 2006. Air sovereignty is the fundamental right of a sovereign state to regulate the use of its airspace and enforce its own aviation law – in extremis by the use of fighter aircraft.

  3. Paris Convention of 1919 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_Convention_of_1919

    The international use of aircraft brought up questions about air sovereignty. The arguments over air sovereignty at the time factored into one of two main viewpoints: either no state had a right to claim sovereignty over the airspace overlying its territory, or every state had the right to do so. [2]

  4. Airspace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airspace

    Class G airspace extends from the surface to the base of the overlying Class E airspace. Although ATC has no authority or responsibility to control air traffic, pilots should remember there are visual flight rules (VFR) minimums which apply to Class G airspace, [14] and that flight over private property should not be presumed valid.

  5. Jets scrambled after Russia spy plane spotted near U.K. airspace

    www.aol.com/jets-scrambled-russia-spy-plane...

    "At no time was it able to enter UK sovereign airspace," it added. The Bear-F, also known as the Tupolev Tu-142, is a maritime reconnaissance and anti-submarine warfare aircraft. The Typhoons were ...

  6. Ukraine retains control over the majority of its airspace

    www.aol.com/news/britain-says-ukraine-controls...

    Ukraine retains control over the majority of its airspace, Britain's defense ministry said, adding that Russia has failed to effectively destroy the country's air force or suppress its air defenses.

  7. Freedoms of the air - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedoms_of_the_air

    These large and strategically located non-IASTA-member states prefer to maintain tighter control over foreign airlines' overflight of their airspace and negotiate transit agreements with other countries on a case-by-case basis. [4]: 23 During the Cold War, the Soviet Union and China did not allow airlines to enter their airspace.

  8. Aviation law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aviation_law

    Roman law and other ancient land systems generally granted all rights in airspace to the owner of the underlying land. The first law specifically applicable to aircraft was a local ordinance enacted in Paris in 1784, one year after the first hot air balloon flight by the Montgolfier brothers. Several court cases involving balloonists were tried ...

  9. Rockall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rockall

    The UK also claims "a circle of UK sovereign airspace over the islet of Rockall". [1] The UK claimed Rockall on 18 September 1955 when "Two Royal Marines and a civilian naturalist, led by Royal Navy officer Lieutenant Commander Desmond Scott, raised a Union flag on the islet and cemented a plaque into the rock". [88]