The incursion on Wednesday was followed by a second incident on Thursday involving two Russian long-range bombers, which flew into Canada's air defense identification zone (ADIZ), officers said yesterday.
Two Canadian F-18 fighter jets intercepted the bombers, which flew out of the area without incident, according to Major Jamie Humphries, a spokesman for the North American Aerospace Defense Command.
The Russian warplanes on Wednesday at no point entered US sovereign air space or Canadian air space, Humphries told AFP.
Although Russian aircraft have entered the zone previously it was "the first time in a long time" that fighter jets passed through the area, said a US defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
To safeguard a country's air space, air defense identification zones extend beyond territorial air space and are designed as a buffer to give a government more time to respond to potentially hostile aircraft. But the zones do not fall under international treaties and are not regulated under international law.
But Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said there was no indication of a link between Poroshenko's visit to Washington and the air incidents.
"We've faced these kinds of incidents before. We take them very, very seriously. And we routinely intercept them," Kirby told CNN.
"We'll make our intentions known to Russia as we always do and we'll certainly discuss our concerns with them at the appropriate time and in the appropriate venue."
The Vostok-2014 exercise started yesterday and was scheduled to last through September 25 and included 100,000 troops and 120 aircraft, according to the Russian defense ministry.
