A US F/A-18 took off from the USS George H. W. Bush in the Mediterranean on Sunday and shot down a Syrian Su-22 the US said had dropped bombs near US-backed forces.
The US had not shot down a manned aircraft since 1999.
The focus of the US's airpower in recent years has turned to providing air support against insurgencies or forces that do not have fighter jets of their own.
The F/A-18, the ubiquitous fighter aboard all US aircraft carriers, has seen its combat role shift almost solely to air-to-ground. In April 2016, just 3 1/2 months into a deployment, aircraft from the USS Harry Truman alone had dropped 1,118 bombs as part of Operation Inherent Resolve, then the most of any carrier during the fight against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
But pilots aboard the Bush could see more air-to-air.
On Monday, Russia said it would treat all US and US-led-coalition jets operating in Syria west of the Euphrates River as targets for its air force. Russia has a few dozen fighter and bomber jets stationed in Syria, while the US has a carrier wing aboard the Bush and a few other squadrons at the nearby Udeid and Incirlik air bases.
SEE ALSO: US-led coalition aircraft shoots down Syrian fighter jet near Raqqa
Join the conversation about this story »
NOW WATCH: This is the inside account of the secret battle US Marines have been fighting against ISIS