The Baltic states want more NATO. They won't get all they seek
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[June 15, 2022]
By Robin Emmott and Andrius Sytas
TAPA MILITARY BASE, Estonia (Reuters) -
Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February, the Baltic states of Estonia,
Latvia and Lithuania have been calling for their region to receive the
biggest build-up of combat-ready NATO forces in Europe since the end of
the Cold War, to be agreed at a summit on June 28-30 in Madrid.
It will not happen, interviews with seven senior diplomats and officials
from leading NATO allies show.
This is partly because the proposals come as the NATO alliance faces a
slew of demands not seen in decades: from countering Russia and China in
the Arctic to quelling Islamic insurgencies in the Sahel, and tackling
new frontiers in space.
Since Russia invaded, the U.S. Congress has approved extra funds and the
Pentagon sent F-35 stealth fighters, as well as attack helicopters, to
Estonia; Britain doubled its force presence at Estonia's Tapa military
base to around 1,700 personnel.
But for many people in the region, which has been occupied by both
Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany and which lies within striking distance
of a Russian garrison at St. Petersburg, that is not enough. For
instance, 84.6% of Latvian respondents to a Benu Aptiekas/Gemius poll in
May said they were highly anxious about Russia's invasion.
"The fact that we could be in danger, it's been on the table all the
time," said Dzintra Bungs, 82, head of the Latvian Occupation Museum
Association in Riga. "It is very important that we have woken up, and
that all Europe awakes."
The Baltics, with a combined population of just over six million, want
the alliance to boost its pre-Ukraine invasion presence of around 5,000
multinational soldiers by as much as tenfold, as well as adding air and
maritime defences.
Many of NATO's 30 allies in Europe and the United States support the
calls for a bigger force in principle, but in reality say allies can
only commit to maintaining higher troop levels, pre-positioning more
equipment, weapons and ammunition in the region and promising rapid
reinforcements.
The broad outline for leaders to agree at the summit, the diplomats and
NATO officials said, is a model of larger multinational NATO
battlegroups in the Baltics, with a commitment to quickly reinforce if
Russia were about to invade. Planning for new air and maritime defences
will come later.
Many members, including Britain and the United States, do not favour
permanent new bases in the Baltics, three of the diplomats told Reuters.
They said it would cost billions and be hard to sustain: The states may
not have enough troops and weaponry, and a permanent presence would be
highly provocative for Moscow.
"The Baltic states will not each get enough NATO troops to create a
division," a NATO diplomat said, referring to their request for up to
15,000 troops across the region, as well as more on stand-by in allied
countries to complement national forces. "Whatever is decided must be
sustainable."
Instead, allied intelligence will help NATO act if Moscow looks set to
invade. During informal discussions at NATO headquarters and in
capitals, that view has won over the majority, the diplomats and
officials said – the plans will need more work after the summit.
The Latvian government declined to comment. Lithuania's presidential
office also declined to comment, but an advisor to the president said
the country would continue to insist, in the run-up to the summit, on
the need for more NATO troops. The office of Estonia's prime minister
said it and allies were working out the details of how to strengthen the
allied presence.
A senior U.S. defence official at NATO declined to comment. A British
defence ministry spokesperson declined to go into details, saying it was
"working closely with our friends and partners to explore how we can
strengthen the alliance's defensive posture."
Russian President Vladimir Putin says his "special military operation"
in Ukraine is essential to ensuring Russia's security. Ukraine and its
Western allies call this a baseless pretext for an invasion which has
raised fears of wider conflict in Europe.
NEXT IN LINE?
For the Baltics, the issue is clear: They could be next.
NATO currently rotates a multinational troop presence through the
region, but the Baltic states say that leaves them vulnerable.
"After the war - I don't think Russia will be defeated - they will still
have huge military capabilities remaining," Valdemaras Rupsys,
Lithuania's Chief of Defence, told Reuters. "After some time ... they
will try to threaten us by military means. You will see."
Since Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, the Baltics have been
warning about a Russian threat that many NATO allies considered
overblown. Now, looking at Moscow's playbook in Georgia and Ukraine of
capturing a small portion of territory from which to build, Baltic
states want NATO to change its approach to their region, a strategically
crucial gateway to a busy commercial shipping route linking Sweden,
Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Germany and Denmark.
Tuuli Duneton, undersecretary for Defence Policy at the Estonian
Ministry of Defence, told Reuters Russia has been preparing for the last
20 years for large-scale military confrontation with NATO while the
alliance's focus was partly elsewhere, particularly in Afghanistan.
A public report by the Estonian Foreign Intelligence
Service earlier this year said Russia's largest war game to date, near
NATO's eastern borders in 2021, involved 200,000 troops, 250 aircraft,
290 tanks, 240 weapon systems and 65 warships. Called Zapad, or West,
the war games were evidence of Moscow's long-term strategy to attack
NATO, the report said. At the time, the Russian defence ministry said
the exercise was rehearsing a purely defensive scenario and allegations
it was preparing to invade Poland or the Baltics were false.
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Lithuanian, German and NATO flags flutter in the air before German
Chancellor Olaf Scholz visits NATO enhanced Forward Presence
battlegroup German troops in Pabrade, Lithuania June 7, 2022.
REUTERS/Ints Kalnins/File Photo
The Kremlin did not reply to an email seeking comment.
A MATTER OF TRANSPORT
In May, the kilted bagpipers and drummers of the Royal Welsh
Battlegroup played marching songs at a parade ground filled with
British, Danish and French troops in the Tapa military base in
Estonia. It was a show laid on for visiting ambassadors.
Tapa is one of four bases, originally of around 1,000 troops each,
that NATO set up in the Baltic states and Poland after Crimea, from
2017 onwards. That force presence has grown and after Russia invaded
Ukraine, NATO activated its Response Force and the United States
sent some 20,000 more U.S. troops to Europe. That gives NATO's
Supreme Allied Commander in Europe (SACEUR) more than 42,000 troops
under his command in Europe, with 120 jets at high alert and over 20
ships ready to respond.
But NATO's Baltic deterrent is still too small, the Baltic states
say. U.S. officials have long warned about the Russian army's
surface-to-air missile systems in its St. Petersburg Garrison, just
160 km (99 miles) from the Estonian border city of Narva.
"The situation in Ukraine shows we were right," said Estonian
Colonel Andrus Merilo, referring to Baltic warnings since 2014.
"Estonia cannot lose territory, NATO cannot lose territory."
He and others say the argument that NATO allies could quickly
regroup to defend a Baltic state in the event of a possible Russian
invasion overlooks an important hurdle: infrastructure.
Before the COVID pandemic, the European Union planned to spend 6.5
billion euros ($6.8 billion) between 2021 and 2027 to modernise
Europe's disjointed road and rail links and weak bridges so states
could move troops east in the case of conflict with Russia.
But the pandemic shock forced a rethink. Only 1.7 billion euros was
allocated.
RIVALRY FOR RESOURCES
Even if the Baltics' proposals are strategically valid, the conflict
in Ukraine is sucking up huge resources as the West supplies arms.
NATO is also facing other demands.
According to NATO data, last year only 10 of the 30 allies met the
alliance's guideline to devote at least 2% of GDP to annual defence
spending, although many, from Belgium to Germany, have since pledged
much more.
France's well-equipped military is focused on Africa, while 20 years
of cutbacks in Germany have robbed it of basic equipment and
technology. Britain aims to further cut the size of its land forces
by 2025, as Belgium, the Netherlands, Romania and others have done –
in part to invest in new technologies like robots and drones and
compete with China in the domains of space and cyber. Italy has
maintained a strong overseas presence of its troops for decades but
is one of the lowest spenders in NATO.
NATO is also setting up or strengthening combat units in Bulgaria,
Hungary, Slovakia and Romania. Romania is receiving a 1,000-strong
troop contingent from France, Belgium and the Netherlands, by
year-end.
In closed-door discussions at NATO, Spain and Italy have called on
the allies to also pay close attention to the southern flank.
Spain's foreign minister, Jose Manuel Albares, has spoken publicly
of his concerns about what he called in April the "Russian threat
from the south," arguing that NATO should be ready to counter the
presence of Russian mercenaries in Mali and Central African
Republic, partly because instability could increase African
migration towards Europe.
FINLAND TO THE RESCUE?
Another argument against bolstering NATO's permanent forces in the
Baltics would be if Sweden and Finland join NATO, as they have
applied to do.
The two states, which lie across the Baltic Sea from Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania, would bring two of Europe's most modern and capable
militaries into the alliance, at a stroke increasing the allied
presence in the region.
That plan, though, is controversial within NATO – Turkey opposes it
– and it risks further antagonising Moscow. Turkey, traditionally a
big troop contributor to NATO missions but also a friend of Moscow,
wants to keep a diplomatic balance, seeing itself as a potential
peace broker in Ukraine.
A possible addition to the summit decision, likely to be discussed
in the coming months, could be to create bigger, permanent NATO
military bases in front-line states with Russia but only send
rotating multinational forces through them, rather than stationing
troops permanently, according to NATO diplomats and the senior U.S.
defence official at NATO.
Unlike U.S. forces in Germany, such bases would not need schools,
family housing and other expensive infrastructure, U.S. Army General
Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in April in
a hearing in a committee in the U.S. Congress.
For Estonian Brigadier-General Enno Mots, NATO must not defer for
too long.
"There's a risk that we underestimate Russia's military capability,"
he told Reuters. "Russia has enough military power to threaten us,
for sure."
(Additional reporting by Sabine Siebold in Berlin, Janis Laizans in
Riga and Belen Carreno in Madrid; Edited by Sara Ledwith)
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