Missile bases bolster NATO in new stance with Russia

May 6, 2016

New York Times:

NATO’s European missile defense system will go live on Thursday when a base in Romania becomes operational. The next day, Poland is scheduled to break ground on its NATO missile-defense base.

The decision by the United States and its allies in Eastern Europe to proceed with ballistic missile defense in the face of increasingly loud Russian criticism is an important stage in the alliance’s new stance toward Moscow.

Those deployments will be coupled this spring with major military exercises in Poland and the Baltics, with significant US participation and a beefed-up rapid reaction force of up to 5,000 troops.

“There will be a quite robust display of military power in Europe and allied resolve, and hopefully Moscow will see it for what it is, an alliance improving its capabilities, said Derek Chollet, a former US assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs,

At the biannual NATO summit meeting in Warsaw in early July, the main issues are expected to be Russia) and how to deal with threats to members like Turkey and Greece from the chaos of Syria, Iraq, Libya, and the Islamic State. The phrase “arc of instability” has reemerged in NATO-speak.

There is confusion about what useful purpose NATO can serve in the south. But there is more clarity on Russia, after its annexation of Crimea and its armed involvement in eastern Ukraine, its threats to the Baltic region, and its intervention in Syria.

Talk of “strategic partnership” is gone. Instead, there are calls to abandon the NATO-Russia Founding Act of 1997, which spoke of shared values and a commitment to peace. There is less emphasis on finding common ground with Russia than on setting clear limits.

The intention in Warsaw is to move from reassurance of eastern NATO allies to deterrence of Russia. That means more troops and equipment, longer deployments, bigger exercises and a persistent presence of NATO and US troops in countries like Poland and the Baltics.

At the 2014 NATO summit meeting in Wales, the alliance decided to rotate small numbers of troops through the Baltic region. Now NATO is planning to deploy four combat battalions of roughly 1,000 troops each in Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Two of them are likely to be American, one German, and one British. And Washington will add a third combat brigade in Europe.

There will be discussion of how to re-create the infrastructure needed to move tanks quickly to Poland, which now takes at least a day.

How will Russia react? President Vladimir Putin views NATO as encircling Russia to limit its influence. Moscow argues that the only possible target of NATO’s missile defenses is Russia, now that Iran has agreed to limit its nuclear program.

Russia has already said it will create three new divisions along its western border and has threatened to put nuclear warheads on its new Iskander missiles and base them in Kaliningrad, territory bordering Poland and Lithuania that Moscow annexed after World War II.

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