The Welland Tribune

War games stoke fears in Balkans

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LIUDAS DAPKUS

VILNIUS, Lithuania — Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are watching with concern the latest round of Russian military drills that some analysts think might be the largest of their kind since the Cold War.

Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskai­te, who often criticizes Russian leaders, said the war games getting underway in Belarus on Thursday are a sign the Kremlin is preparing for conflict with NATO.

“We are anxious about this drill ... it is an open preparatio­n for war with the West,” Grybauskai­te told reporters.

Soldiers, tanks and weapons have arrived in Belarus, according to Lithuania’s military. Leaders and defence analysts in the Baltic states fear some of the equipment could remain in Belarus once the drills are done.

“Leaving weapons in Belarus means the Russian army could prepare bases for a sudden broad attack ... right at the NATO border,” Lithuanian officer Darius Antanaitis said.

Russia and Belarus say the exercises scheduled to run until Sept. 20 involve 5,500 Russian and 7,200 Belarusian troops. Estonian Defence Minister Juri Liuk has said Moscow could deploy up to 100,000 troops.

While Liuk doesn’t believe the drills represent a “preparator­y move” against NATO, he said “there is reason for concern, because Russian intents are often unclear.”

The 29-member alliance, of which the Baltic states are members, has boosted its own military presence in eastern Europe. The U.S. last month sent additional F-15 fighter jets to patrol the Baltic Sea region.

“Russia has already used similar exercises to launch military interventi­ons to other countries like Georgia or Ukraine,” Nerijus Maliukevic­ius, a political analyst at Vilnius University’s Institute of Internatio­nal Relations and Political Science, said.

These viewed are echoed on the streets of Tallinn, the medieval capital of Estonia.

“I do not feel very good having these military exercises very close to Estonia, but again we are part of NATO,” resident Piret Veigel said. “That gives me some comfort.”

 ?? SADIQ ASYRAF/GETTY IMAGES ?? Malaysian Fire and Rescue personnel stand outside the Darul Quran Ittifaqiya­h school in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday, after 23 people, mostly teenage boys, died when a blaze tore through the building.
SADIQ ASYRAF/GETTY IMAGES Malaysian Fire and Rescue personnel stand outside the Darul Quran Ittifaqiya­h school in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday, after 23 people, mostly teenage boys, died when a blaze tore through the building.

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