In October 2013, Russia used the Il-20M over the Black Sea to fly reconnaissance missions along the Turkish coast. When the machine was spotted, two F-16 fighter planes took off on the Turkish side to intercept the scout. The machine ultimately headed for Bulgarian airspace and the pursuit was aborted. This was repeated on April 13, 2014. Here the Il-20M, coming from Romania and flying east, again flew 15 to 20 nautical miles along the Turkish Black Sea coast before being identified and intercepted by four Turkish F-16s. On October 22, 2014, according to the
Estonian military, an Il-20M entered Estonian airspace and stayed in it for a short period of time. The aircraft was identified and escorted by aircraft from the Portuguese, Belgian and Swedish Air Forces. The
Russian Ministry of Defense denied a violation of Estonian airspace. The Il-20M was involved in the deployment of the Russian Air Force in Syria in 2015. It was later supplemented by the
Tu-214R. According to a tweet by the German Air Force, on November 28, 2022, an alert group consisting of two
Eurofighter Typhoon fighter planes identified an Il-20M. The machine flew without a transponder code in international airspace between the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad Oblast and the Russian mainland. The German alarm squad started from
Ämari Air Base in Estonia. According to another tweet, on January 27, 2023, a German Air Force alarm squad consisting of two Eurofighter Typhoon fighter planes identified and accompanied an Il-20M (RF-93611) over the Baltic Sea. The alarm squad belonged to the Tactical Air Force Squadron 73 "Steinhoff" at the Rostock-Laage air base, where they then returned. On December 9, 2024, two F-35s intercepted an IL-20 Coot-A, according to a news release from the Dutch Ministry of Defense. The F-35s remotely escorted the spy plane over international waters to the border of NATO's area of responsibility. On March 27, 2025, NATO’s
Combined Air Operations Centre (CAOC) registered unusual activity in the airspace over Kaliningrad. Twelve minutes after identifying the threat, two Eurofighters stationed at the Rostock-Laage Air Base launched on a quick reaction alert to intercept the suspected Russian aircraft, which was flying without any visible identification markings. At that time, the aircraft was already on a course toward German NATO airspace. The Eurofighter pilots escorted the Russian reconnaissance plane, which was identified as a surveillance aircraft, for several kilometers east of the island of
Rügen before completing their mission and returning to base. On August 20, 2025,
NORAD reported that a single IL-20 Coot flew inside the
Alaskan defense zone for approximately two hours and four minutes. The aircraft did not enter Canadian or U.S. air space. NORAD dispatched an E-3 Sentry early warning and control aircraft, a KC-135 aerial refueler and two F-16 Fighting Falcons to intercept, track and monitor the IL-20. On September 21, 2025, two Eurofighter Typhoon fighter jets from Germany and two Gripen fighter jets from Sweden were scrambled to intercept and track a Russian IL-20 surveillance plane that was flying unidentified over the South Baltic Sea. The Russian plane had been flying without providing a flight path or radio contact that could signal its presence, according to Swedish and German air force officials. On October 28, 30 and 31, 2025, IL-20s entered the international airspace over the Baltic Sea with their transponders switched off and without having transmitted a
flight plan. Polish
MiG-29 fighters intercepted one of them on October 31 and escorted it back. ==Further development==