This
is some of the most egregious nonsense coming out of the corporate
press
Spiegel:
NATO unprepared if Russia moved into Baltic members
According
to the German magazine Spiegel, NATO is examining scenarios in the
event of a Russian military move in Eastern Europe. Alarm bells are
already ringing in eastern states, and NATO is keen to show it could
cope
18
May, 2014
The
article, which appeared in Spiegel's
online edition in German on
Sunday, cites an internal North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
draft document pertaining to discussions occurring within the
military alliance and among individual members about possible
scenarios if Russia were to launch a military campaign in Eastern
Europe.
NATO has observed a Russian troop buildup near its border with Ukraine, but Russia claims it has no current plans for a military move. Ukraine is not a member of NATO, but the alliance is keen to show that it can effectively defend its Baltic members should the need arise.
Troop
exercises
On
Friday, NATO launched a large-scale operation in Estonia known as
Exercise Steadfast Javelin 1 to "reflect NATO's collective
defense in the Baltic region," according to a NATO
statement.
Six thousand troops from several NATO members including the United
States (pictured above) are taking part in the exercise, which runs
through May 23.
The leader of the
exercise, General Hans-Lothar Domröse, said in the statement that
"there is no doubt the Alliance is strong and NATO's resolve to
assure its members of the ongoing utility of the Washington Treaty
remains central to our actions."
The
Washington Treaty refers to the alliance's founding North
Atlantic Treaty,
signed in Washington, D.C. in 1949.
According
to information obtained by Spiegel, however, NATO would have a
difficult time defending against a potential Russian incursion
under Article
5 of
the North Atlantic Treaty. This states that an armed attack against
one NATO member is to be considered an attack against them all, and
the attacked nation is to receive swift assistance as deemed
necessary from the other members. This could include a military
response.
NATO
must 'find an answer'
The problem, according
to Spiegel, is that it has long been practice to not consider an
attack from Russia to be a threat, and therefore military
strongholds have not been established in
eastern European countries."When Baltic states joined NATO, there wasn't a military threat from Russia," German EU parliamentarian Elmar Brok, a long-time veteran of EU foreign affairs, told Spiegel. "The alliance stuck to the agreement with Russia and didn't station any troops east of the Elbe. Now that it appears [Russian President Vladimir] Putin's policies have changed, NATO has to find an answer."
Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski told Spiegel that it was time for NATO to repeat what it had done in Western European nations in countries like his.
"There are bases in Great Britain, Spain, Germany, Italy and Turkey. But there aren't any bases where they are actually needed," he said.
Unrest
continues in Ukraine
Russia has questioned the legitimacy of an election held under "the thunder of guns," while Kyiv says it will not talk with "robbers and terrorists," referring to the separatists in the east.
"They will not be telling the Ukrainian people how to live in our country," interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk told Saturday's meeting.
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