Manila Bulletin

US Army to launch war games on NATO’s eastern flank

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WARSAW (AFP) — Some 18,000 troops from 19 mostly NATO countries begin annual US-led military exercises in Poland and the Baltic states on Sunday to boost combat readiness on the alliance’s eastern flank as it faces an increasing­ly assertive Russia.

The eighth Saber Strike maneuvers, which will run until June 15, come after it was revealed Poland is considerin­g a proposal to welcome a permanent deployment of US troops to the country.

A Polish defense ministry “informatio­n document” emerged this week showing that Warsaw could spend from $1.5 to $2 billion (1.3 to 1.7 billion euros) to help cover the cost of stationing a US tank unit in Poland.

The proposal triggered immediate criticism from Moscow, with the Kremlin insisting that any such deployment “will not benefit in any way the security and stability on the continent.”

The US has ramped up its presence on NATO’s eastern flank and notably Poland since Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine.

The US army set up a new European headquarte­rs in Poland in May, 2017 to command some 6,000 of its troops deployed in NATO and Pentagon operations in the region.

The move was one of the largest deployment­s of US forces in Europe since the Cold War and was meant to reassure NATO’s easternmos­t allies spooked by Russia’s frequent military exercises near their borders and the Crimea annexation.

Cementing ties The US also leads a multi-national NATO battle group in Poland. Germany, Britain and Canada command three others in nearby Baltic states Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, where Saber Strike maneuvers are planned.

Speaking in Warsaw on Monday, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g said he expected leaders at a July NATO summit in Brussels to “make decisions on reinforcem­ent, readiness and military mobility” of forces in Europe, particular­ly with regard to the four battle groups deployed in 2016.

Further cementing strong defense ties with Washington, Poland signed a $4.75-billion (3.8-billion-euro) contract in March to purchase a US-made Patriot anti-missile system, in its largest-ever weapons deal.

Moscow complained about the prospect of the deployment of Patriot systems in Poland and Romania, which it says violates a 1987 arms treaty and could be tailored to shoot missiles at Russia.

In February, Lithuania accused Russia of permanentl­y deploying nuclearcap­able Iskander ballistic missiles to its Kaliningra­d exclave.

This year’s Saber Strike maneuvers will be partly held in this sensitive region.

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