They are conducting missions to track Russian movement, which might include listening to soldiers’ phone calls, according to one expert.
They also help reveal the position of Russian warships and submarines
The position of the planes helps show the areas NATO countries are interested in, like Crimea and Kaliningrad.
Sky News analysis of flight tracking data from a typical day in recent weeks shows that a host of NATO and Swedish planes are monitoring key Russian positions
Two US flights departed an airbase in Lithuania.
These planes are designed to intercept electronic communications and can be seen flying back and forth along the Russian border of Kaliningrad
Another aircraft flew for over five hours, circling an area where the Baltic and North Seas meet. Russian vessels were believed to be nearby.
According to Douglas Barrie, a senior fellow for military aerospace at the IISS, the planes are "digital listening posts in the sky"
Flight tracking data shows NATO and Swedish planes are monitoring key Russian positions.
A US aircraft departed from Spain. It turned off its transponder for an hour, but it was picked up again near the position of Russian ships heading into the Mediterranean
The planes are equipped with radar and other devices which allow them to collect signals sent from Russian bases and to intercept communications.
Two planes tracked the coastline of Crimea - one from a US airbase in Sicily and an RAF plane from Waddington
Here’s more details on what NATO spy planes are doing to keep tabs on the Russians 👇 news.sky.com/story/russia-u…
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Sky’s @AlexCrawfordSky is in the village of Qala-e-Charkh in Afghanistan, where desperation and poverty has pushed more and more families to sell their young girls into early arranged marriages.
The children here are at the forefront of Afghanistan's humanitarian crisis. Their village is at the centre of one of the poorest districts, where up to 95% of people are in need of food or monetary assistance.
Agha Mohammad ‘married’ off his two-year-old baby girl Sitera for $2000 but the family returned her days after because she wouldn’t stop crying as she was still being breast-fed by her mother.
Energy regulator @Ofgem has announced a new price cap of £2,000 a year, a figure that is likely to push over a quarter of British households into fuel poverty.
Sky News has analysed the areas where low-income and high bills could leave some people struggling more than others
This map (below) shows the parts of the country that have the biggest fuel bills.
The top 5% are highlighted green, many of them are rural areas with larger, detached homes, which are more expensive to heat
We can overlay that map with the parts of the country that are in the lowest 5% by income - in blue here.
They're a bit smaller and harder to make out because they are largely city areas
.@AlexCrawfordSky has been inside a hospital in Afghanistan’s poorest province Badghis as a humanitarian disaster unfolds.
Every day children are brought in malnourished to this hospital controlled by the Taliban, where medicine is in short supply and plug sockets don’t work
In one ward there were four babies crammed on a single bed. Another was held in his mother’s arms nearby with no space available to lay him down and yet another was being looked after by his mother on the floor. They are all the victims of a huge measles outbreak in the district
In the maternity ward there’s a terrified looking teenager called Asiya who’s about to give birth.
Her family sold her into marriage for 5000-dollars, an above average price. But now she’s frightened and in pain.
‘I’m nervous I’m going to die,’ she says in a quiet voice.
Kyiv feels like a city caught in a moment in time, suspended between humdrum normality and the threat of looming conflict.
There are thousands of Russian troops just a few hours' drive north of here, but life goes on as it has for seven years of war
Among the pickled vegetables on her stall in a cold and draughty Soviet-era market building, Sky’s @DominicWaghorn met Tatiana.
President Volodymyr Zelenzky had addressed the nation urging his people not to panic. Tatiana seemed unimpressed
"We are all worried because everyone wants peace. We have kids and grandchildren so we don't want war to happen. We won't panic until the Russian tanks arrive in Kyiv," she told @DominicWaghorn