NATO Ramps Up Military Forces Near Russia to Cold War Levels
NATO has been gradually building up its forces
in Europe for over a decade, but has recently undertaken a huge increase
in its presence in the Baltic region and Eastern Europe. The NATO
Response Force (NRF) was originally set up following the Prague summit
in 2002 as a multinational force made up of land, air, maritime and
Special Operations Forces (SOF) that could deploy quickly, Sputnik
reported.
Since then, there has been a steady buildup
of forces, particularly around Russia. NATO Allies decided to enhance
the NRF in 2014 by creating a "Spearhead Force" within it, known as the
Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF).
In June 2015, the alliance held a huge exercise
in the Baltic, with 49 ships, 61 aircraft, one submarine, and a combined
amphibious landing force of 700 US Finnish and Swedish troops
alongside NATO partners Finland, Georgia and Sweden. Overall, 5,600
troops took part.
In November 2015, the leaders of Lithuania,
Latvia, Estonia, Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania, Poland and Slovakia have
called for an increased NATO presence in Eastern Europe and the Baltic.
The defense ministers meeting in Brussels Wednesday are due to confirm
plans for a massive presence in the Baltic and Eastern Europe region.
Eight New Headquarters in Eastern Europe
British media reported ahead of the meeting that
five UK warships and about 530 Royal Navy personnel will be sent as part
of what sources described as "NATO's largest military buildup
in eastern Europe since the Cold War."
At a press conference before the meeting, NATO
Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said NATO was: "increasing our
presence in the eastern part of the alliance with more assurance
measures meaning planes, air policing, naval presence in the Baltic Sea
and the Black Sea, increased naval presence and also more boots on the
ground with more exercises and troops.
"And we are also increasing our ability
to reinforce, we have tripled the size of the NATO Response Force
to around 40,000 troops and this is a force which can move quickly and
the core element or the lead element is the Spearhead Force which can
move within a couple of days," Stoltenberg said.
The ministers are due to announce the formation
of eight headquarter units in eight Eastern European countries and are
due to discuss a further increase of its presence in the "eastern part
of the alliance and also to increase our defense and deterrence posture
by this combination of forward presence and ability to reinforce if
needed."
Since the end of the Cold War, NATO has admitted
to its alliance the former Warsaw Pact states of the Czech Republic,
Hungary, Poland, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania,
Slovakia, Slovenia, Albania and Croatia.
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