Lithuania president eyes hike in defence spending to host more NATO
troops
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[June 23, 2022]
By Andrius Sytas
VILNIUS (Reuters) - Lithuania must raise
defence spending to 3% of GDP to enable it to host a much larger number
of NATO troops, its president said ahead of NATO summit that will
address how to counter rising security threats posed by Russia's
invasion of Ukraine.
NATO allies remain split over troop deployments and extra weaponry,
should be based, with eastern states closer to Russia seeking greater
permanent reinforcements on their soil although they may lack the
infrastructure to accommodate them.
Germany now commands a NATO detachment of about 1,700 troops in
Lithuania, which was reinforced in the immediate aftermath of Russia's
February invasion.
Ahead of the NATO summit next week in Madrid, Berlin agreed to earmark a
combat-ready brigade with some 3,000 troops that could be deployed
quickly to defend Lithuania if necessary.
With time it could be stationed in the Baltic republic of 2.8 million
people, Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda and German Chancellor Olaf
Scholz said on June 7.
Nauseda told Reuters in an interview this week that he hoped Lithuania
would be able to host the brigade by 2027, but only if it spends
hundreds of millions to develop military installations to house it.
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Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda listens during an interview in
Vilnius, Lithuania June 22, 2022. REUTERS/Ints Kalnins
"Infrastructure-wise, we are not ready to deploy a
brigade-sized unit in Lithuania because there is no accommodation
infrastructure here. I hope that by 2027 we will be ready," he said
on Wednesday.
"We are talking about hundreds of millions of euros for that
purpose. And this is also a serious amount of money which allows me
to talk about the necessity of achieving 3% of defence spending in
the coming years."
Lithuania has earmarked 1.5 billion euros - 2.52% of gross domestic
product in the nation of 2.8 million people - to defence next year.
Fellow Baltic republic Estonia expects the NATO summit to designate
additional units for its defence, but they would not be based on its
soil, Prime Minister Kaja Kallas told Reuters.
"We have some housing (for troops) but of course we have to invest
more. And that is why, considering our size, that's why I think the
solution is that some troops are stationed elsewhere."
(Reporting by Andrius Sytas in Vilnius; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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