<p>The world's largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, sailed into Oslo on Wednesday, a first for such a US ship, in a show of NATO force at a time of heightened tension between NATO and Russia over the war in Ukraine.</p>.<p>The ship and its crew will be conducting training exercises with the Norwegian armed forces along the country's coast in the coming days, the Norwegian military said.</p>.<p>"This visit is an important signal of the close bilateral relationship between the US and Norway and a signal of the credibility of collective defence and deterrence," said Jonny Karlsen, a spokesperson for the Norwegian Joint Headquarters, the operational command centre of the military.</p>.<p><strong>Read |</strong><b> </b><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/nato-reaches-back-to-cold-war-past-with-first-major-defence-plans-in-decades-1219813.html" target="_blank"><strong>NATO reaches back to Cold War past with first major defence plans in decades</strong></a></p>.<p>Norwegian media reported the aircraft carrier would sail north of the Arctic Circle. Karlsen declined to comment on the reports.</p>.<p>The Russian embassy in Oslo condemned the aircraft carrier's Oslo visit.</p>.<p>"There are no questions in the (Arctic) north that require a military solution, nor topics where outside intervention is needed," the embassy said in a Facebook post.</p>.<p>"Considering that it is admitted in Oslo that Russia poses no direct military threat to Norway, such demonstrations of power appear illogical and harmful."</p>.<p>NATO member Norway shares a border with Russia in the Arctic and last year became Europe's largest gas supplier after a drop in Russian gas flows.</p>.<p>The Norwegian military and NATO allies have been patrolling around offshore oil and gas platforms since the autumn, following explosions on the Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Sea.</p>
<p>The world's largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, sailed into Oslo on Wednesday, a first for such a US ship, in a show of NATO force at a time of heightened tension between NATO and Russia over the war in Ukraine.</p>.<p>The ship and its crew will be conducting training exercises with the Norwegian armed forces along the country's coast in the coming days, the Norwegian military said.</p>.<p>"This visit is an important signal of the close bilateral relationship between the US and Norway and a signal of the credibility of collective defence and deterrence," said Jonny Karlsen, a spokesperson for the Norwegian Joint Headquarters, the operational command centre of the military.</p>.<p><strong>Read |</strong><b> </b><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/nato-reaches-back-to-cold-war-past-with-first-major-defence-plans-in-decades-1219813.html" target="_blank"><strong>NATO reaches back to Cold War past with first major defence plans in decades</strong></a></p>.<p>Norwegian media reported the aircraft carrier would sail north of the Arctic Circle. Karlsen declined to comment on the reports.</p>.<p>The Russian embassy in Oslo condemned the aircraft carrier's Oslo visit.</p>.<p>"There are no questions in the (Arctic) north that require a military solution, nor topics where outside intervention is needed," the embassy said in a Facebook post.</p>.<p>"Considering that it is admitted in Oslo that Russia poses no direct military threat to Norway, such demonstrations of power appear illogical and harmful."</p>.<p>NATO member Norway shares a border with Russia in the Arctic and last year became Europe's largest gas supplier after a drop in Russian gas flows.</p>.<p>The Norwegian military and NATO allies have been patrolling around offshore oil and gas platforms since the autumn, following explosions on the Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Sea.</p>