Times of Suriname

Hundreds of US Marines land in Norway, irking Russia

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NORWAY - Some 300 US Marines landed in Norway yesterday for a six-month deployment, the first time since World War Two that foreign troops have been allowed to be stationed there, in a deployment which has irked Norway’s Arctic neighbor Russia.

Officials played down any link between the operation and NATO concerns over Russia, but the deployment coincides with the US sending several thousand troops to Poland to beef up its Eastern European allies worried about Moscow’s assertiven­ess. Soldiers from Camp Lejeune in North Carolina landed a little after 10 am CET at a snowcovere­d Vaernes airport near Trondheim, Norway’s thirdlarge­st city, where temperatur­es were reaching -2 degrees Celsius. US troops are to stay in Norway for a year, with the current batch of Marines being replaced after their sixmonth tour is complete. A spokesman for the Norwegian Home Guards, who will host the Marines at the Vaernes military base, about 1,500 km from the Russian border, said the US troops will learn about winter warfare. “For the first four weeks they will have basic winter training, learn how to cope with skis and to survive in the Arctic environmen­t,” said Rune Haarstad, a Home Guard spokesman. “It has nothing to do with Russia or the current situation.”

In March the Marines will take part in the Joint Viking exercises, which will also include British troops, he added. The Russian Embassy in Oslo did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment by Reuters yesterday. It questioned the need for such a move when it was announced in October. “Taking into account multiple statements of Norwegian officials about the absence of threat from Russia to Norway we would like to understand for what purposes is Norway so willing to increase its military potential, in particular through stationing of American forces in Vaernes?” it told Reuters at the time.

(Reuters.com)

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