Along
with an Israeli airstrike on Syria, a provocation.
6,000
NATO troops hold one of largest post-Cold War drills near Russia's
borders
Poland
and the Baltic states are hosting the largest strategic war games the
defense alliance has held in ten years. The NATO Response Force will
practice defending the Baltics from an unidentified foreign invader
2
November, 2013
The
‘Steadfast Jazz’ exercise, launching on Saturday, gathers some
6,000 troops from all NATO members as well as non-member states -
Finland, Sweden and Ukraine. Around half of them will participate in
live exercise training, which will involve dozens of armor, aircraft
and naval vehicles. The other half of the personnel are headquarters
staff, who will take part in command and control drills.
The
week-long war games are designed “to make sure that our
rapid-reaction force, the NATO Response Force (NRF), is ready to
defend any ally, deploy anywhere and deal with any threat,” said
NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen.
Eastern
European members of NATO have been seeking to host large-scale
alliance drills for years, and ‘Steadfast Jazz’ is the largest
since 2006. The scenario of the games involve an unidentified foreign
nation invading Estonia over a territorial dispute, and the alliance
deploying its rapid-response force to fend off the aggressor.
While
the name of the invading force is not stated, geography and global
politics leave little doubt. For several years there was a rising
concern in the three Baltic states over a perceived threat from
Russia, which, according to some alarmists, could move its troops and
occupy the region, which used to be part of the Soviet Union, in a
matter of days or even hours. The big drill is partially meant to
reassure the weary NATO members that the alliance is ready to protect
them.
"Russia
as a country in the last five years has been increasing its
assertiveness in the Baltic," Latvian defense minister, Artis
Pabriks, told Reuters. "'Steadfast Jazz' is important to us as
these are the first exercises where we really train to defend our
territory."
The
latest peak of concern in the Baltic came in September during the
Zapad annual joint military exercise held by Russia and Belarus.
Prior to the drill, some media in the Baltics claimed that they were
training for a potential invasion.
Russia
and NATO, partners in some areas like counter-terrorism, have their
unresolved disputes. Arguably the most painful is the alliance’s
plan to deploy an American anti-ballistic missile system in Eastern
Europe. Moscow sees the plan as a threat to its national security,
since it may undermine Russia’s nuclear deterrence.
Despite
years of effort to find a compromise, Russia’s concerns over the
ABM shield have not been addressed. In the latest anti-missile move,
the US and Romania this week have begun revamping a military base in
the eastern European country, which will host some elements of the
system.
Russia’s
latest military build-up move is the planned deployment of additional
S-300 air defense batteries in Belarus. The two countries have joint
integrated strategic air defense system guarding their borders.
The
tension, however, is far from the antagonism of the Cold War. NATO
representatives attended the Zapad drill, while Russia sent its
observers for the ‘Steadfast Jazz’ exercise.
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