The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Russia warns US over manoeuvres in Baltic Sea

Kremlin accuses US of sailing destroyer close to border, says will respond with ‘necessary action’ in future

- ROBIN EMMOTT

RUSSIA ACCUSED the United States on Wednesday of intimidati­on by sailing a US naval destroyer close to Russia’s border in the Baltics and warned that the Russian military would respond with “all necessary measures” to any future incidents.

Speaking after a meeting between NATO envoys and Russia, their first in almost two years, Moscow’s ambassador to NATO said the April 11 maritime incident showed there could be no improvemen­t in ties until NATO withdrew from Russia’s borders.

“This is about attempts to exercise military pressure on Russia,” the envoy, Alexander Grushko, said. “We will take all necessary measures, precaution­s, to compensate for these attempts to use military force,” he told reporters.

US Ambassador to NATO Douglas Lute pressed Russia about the incident, warning it had been dangerous. The US has said the guided missile destroyer USS Cook was on routine business near Poland when it was harassed by Russian jets.

“We were in internatio­nal waters,” a NATO diplomat reported Lute as telling Grushko during the Nato-russia council meeting.

Despite what officials said was a calm and profession­al meeting, the public comments highlighte­d the state of tension that persists between the sides since Moscow’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea in March 2014 and its support for separatist rebels in Ukraine.

NATO Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g said the NATO member states had, during the meeting, rejected Grushko’s account of the crisis in eastern Ukraine, where 9,000 people have died since April 2014.

Stoltenber­g said while there were “profound disagreeme­nts” over how to handle Europe’s security, each side urgently needed to talk more and to use existing rules to reduce military risk.

Stoltenber­g suggested revamping a Cold War-era treaty known as the Vienna document, which sets out the rules for large-scale exercises and other military activity, as well as telephone hotlines and other military communicat­ion channels. “We have to use our lines of communicat­ion,” he said.

Russia’s chief concern is NATO’S biggest modernisat­ion since the Cold War, which is likely to include a military build-up in eastern Europe with a rotating, multinatio­nal force in Poland and the Baltics.

NATO says the plans are a response to Russian aggression following Moscow’s annexation of Crimea. Poland and other NATO members in the Baltics worry about an increase in the Russian military presence in its Kaliningra­d enclave, where Russia is positionin­g longer-range surface-to-air missiles.

REUTERS

“We were in internatio­nal waters,” NATO ambassador told Moscow during the Nato-russia council meeting

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