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Tag: NATO countries

  • The troops on high alert to fight alongside Nato

    Troops from the North West are on high alert to deploy to Nato countries in Eastern Europe if conflict in the region escalates.

    The 1st Battalion of the Duke of Lancaster’s Regiment is serving as Nato’s Forward Land Forces Strategic Reserve (FLF), meaning that should the call come in, the battalion would be ready to fight in as little as 10 days alongside Nato forces from around the world.

    Lt Rhuari Stewart, in command of an anti-tank unit, said the troops were not nervous.

    “You take it in your stride, it’s part of being in the Army. There’s always a potential that something might happen,” he said.

    Lt Rhuari Stewart says the troops are not nervous [BBC]

    Some of the troops from the regiment are already on the ground in Estonia, where British troops have command of Nato defences.

    Meanwhile, at Weeton Barracks, Lancashire, troops from the Burma Brigade were getting hands-on experience with drones.

    Their unmanned aerial technology varies in size from approximately a meter in length to being small enough to be fired out of a gun barrel.

    2nd Lt Connor Flinter said: “It’s really useful because it enables us to use them in whatever environment we are in, whether urban or rural.”

    Several soldiers crowd around a small screen on a bag on the ground. Several boots can be seen to the right of the picture

    A group of soldiers gets familiar with drone technology [BBC]

    Some of regiment are heading to France in February for Exercise Gaulish – an integration with French forces on a training exercise at CENZUB, a purpose built small town used for military training.

    Stewart said exercises with different countries were vital to ensure troops can work together on the battlefield: “We’re learning how they fight, learning their weapon systems, their kit and their technology.”

    Flinter said it had been interesting to see how the French approached difficult scenarios: “They most predominantly use vehicles, whereas we are light infantry on our feet, and try and be a bit more sneaky,” he said.

    A man holding a rifle peers around a corner outside several buildings. A tank can be seen on the road ahead of him.

    UK Troops training at CENZUB, a purpose built town for military exercises [Ministry of Defence]

    If successful, some troops from the regiment may be deployed into French units in Romania.

    The battalion was given the role of FLF during the summer when it was first introduced, and will remain on high alert for at least three years.

    Stewart said: “Whilst we might not speak the same language, we all share that same ethos, there’s a lot of things in common between us, and I think that’s what’s so special about Nato.”

    Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

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  • NATO mulls having a full air defence mission to secure Baltic skies

    NATO could transform the current mission monitoring the airspace over its eastern flank into a full defensive operation following repeated incursions by Russian drones and jets, a top military officer said on Saturday.

    Admiral Giuseppe Cavo Dragone, chairman of the 32-member alliance’s Military Committee, said after a meeting of chiefs-of-staff in Riga that such a move could be an option once ongoing investigations are complete.

    He cautioned that it is still too early to fully assess what actually happened during the recent airspace violations.

    Converting the current air policing mission into an air defence mission could significantly bolster NATO’s capabilities on the eastern flank. New rules of engagement would likely make it easier to intercept or shoot down intruding aircraft.

    NATO countries met Tuesday at Estonia’s request after three Russian MiG-31 fighter jets flew through Estonian airspace over the Baltic Sea for roughly 12 minutes. In a subsequent statement, the military alliance warned of potential force in response to further violations.

    Warsaw had earlier reported that Russian drones had entered Polish airspace on September 9.

    The NATO Baltic Air Policing mission has been in place since 2004, designed to safeguard the airspace of alliance partners in Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia during peacetime. NATO members provide rotating fighter jets for the mission, as the Baltic states themselves do not have suitable aircraft.

    A NATO flag flies in the wind in front of the NATO headquarters in Brussels. Anna Ross/dpa

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  • NATO to hold Article 4 talks after Russian jets detected over Estonia

    NATO countries plan to meet early next week to discuss the airspace violation by Russian fighter jets reported by Estonia, a spokesman for the alliance told dpa on Saturday.

    Consultations will be held under Article 4 of the NATO treaty, he said, without providing an exact date for the talks.

    NATO’s Article 4 provides for talks among allies if a members feels that its “territorial integrity, political independence or security” is threatened.

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    Estonia requested the consultations after it detected three Russian MIG-31 fighter jets in its airspace without authorization early on Friday.

    Russia denied Estonia's account, stating that it had not violated any borders.

    Poland also reported on Friday that two Russian fighter jets had approached a Polish drilling platform in the Baltic Sea at low altitude, violating a security zone.

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  • Russia warns NATO against establishing no-fly zone over Ukraine

    Russia would consider NATO forces protecting Ukrainian airspace as a declaration of war, former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev said on Monday.

    “Implementing the provocative idea of Kiev and other idiots to create a no-fly zone over ‘Ukraine’ and allowing NATO countries to down our drones will mean only one thing: NATO’s war with Russia,” the politician wrote on his Telegram channel.

    After a slew of Russian drones violated Polish airspace last week, NATO deployed additional fighter jets along its eastern flank. That prompted fresh discussion in Europe about extending protection to western Ukraine and shooting down incoming Russian drones or missiles there.

    Since the start of the large-scale invasion in 2022, Ukraine has been calling for a NATO-enforced no-fly zone. But Kiev’s Western allies have so far refrained from such a step, fearing a direct military confrontation with Moscow.

    Medvedev, who now wields significant power in Russia as deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council, also threatened retaliation if Russia’s state assets frozen in the European Union were paid out to Ukraine as a part of a reparations loan.

    Moscow, he wrote, would pursue the responsible EU states and politicians “in all possible international and national courts — and in some cases, outside of them.”

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  • The GOP Has Crossed an Ominous Threshold on Foreign Policy

    The GOP Has Crossed an Ominous Threshold on Foreign Policy

    The long decline of the Republican Party’s internationalist wing may have reached a tipping point.

    Since Donald Trump emerged as the GOP’s dominant figure in 2016, he has championed an isolationist and nationalist agenda that is dubious of international alliances, scornful of free trade, and hostile to not only illegal but also legal immigration. His four years in the White House marked a shift in the party’s internal balance of power away from the internationalist perspective that had dominated every Republican presidency from Dwight Eisenhower through George W. Bush.

    But even so, during Trump’s four years in office, a substantial remnant of traditionally internationalist Republicans in Congress and in the key national-security positions of his own administration resisted his efforts to unravel America’s traditional alliances.

    Now though, evidence is rapidly accumulating on multiple fronts that the internal GOP resistance is crumbling to Trump’s determination to steer America away from its traditional role as a global leader.

    In Congress, that shift was evident in last week’s widespread Senate and House Republican opposition to continued aid for Ukraine. The same movement is occurring among Republican voters, as a new Chicago Council on Global Affairs study demonstrates.

    The study used the council’s annual national surveys of American attitudes about foreign affairs to examine the evolution of thinking within the GOP on key international issues. It divided Republicans into two roughly equal groups: those who said they held a very favorable view of Trump and the slightly larger group that viewed him either only somewhat favorably or unfavorably.

    The analysis found that skepticism of international engagement—and in particular resistance to supporting Ukraine in its grueling war against Russia—is growing across the GOP. But it also found that the Republicans most sympathetic to Trump have moved most sharply away from support for an engaged American role. Now a clear majority of those Trump-favorable Republicans reject an active American role in world affairs, the study found.

    “Trumpism is the dominant tendency in Republican foreign policy and it’s isolationist, it’s unilateralist, it’s amoral,” Richard Haass, a former president of the Council on Foreign Relations and the director of policy planning at the State Department under George W. Bush, told me a few months ago.

    That dynamic has big implications for a second Trump term. The growing tendency of Republican voters and elected officials alike to embrace Trump’s nationalist vision means that a reelected Trump would face much less internal opposition than he did in his first term if he moves to actually extract America from NATO, reduce the presence of U.S. troops in Europe and Asia, coddle Russian President Vladimir Putin, or impose sweeping tariffs on imports.

    During Trump’s first term, “the party was not yet prepared to abandon internationalism and therefore opposed him,” Ivo Daalder, the chief executive officer of the Chicago Council, told me. “On Russia sanctions, on NATO, on other issues, he had people in the government who undermined him consistently. That won’t happen in a second term. In a second term, his views are clear: He will only appoint people who agree with them, and he has cowed the entire Republican Party.”

    The erosion of GOP resistance to Trump’s approach has been dramatically underscored in just the past few days. Most Senate Republicans last week voted against the $95 billion aid package to Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan. After that bill passed the Senate anyway, Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson said that he would not bring it to a vote. All of this unfolded as an array of GOP leaders defended Trump for his remarks at a rally in South Carolina last weekend when he again expressed disdain for NATO and said he would encourage Russia to do “whatever the hell they want” to members of the alliance who don’t spend enough on their own defense.

    Many of the 22 GOP Republicans who voted for the aid package for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan were veteran senators whose views about America’s international role were shaped under the presidencies of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, or George W. Bush, long before Trump and his “America First” movement loomed so large in conservative politics. It was telling that Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, who was first elected to the Senate while Reagan was president in 1984, was the aid package’s most ardent GOP supporter.

    By contrast, many of the 26 Republican senators who voted no were newer members, elected since Trump became the party’s leading man. Republican Senator J. D. Vance of Ohio, one of Trump’s most ardent acolytes, delivered an impassioned speech, in which he portrayed the aid to Ukraine as the latest in a long series of catastrophic missteps by the internationalist forces in both parties that included the wars in Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq.

    Soon after the bill passed, first-term Republican Senator Eric Schmitt of Missouri noted a stark generational contrast in the vote. “Nearly every Republican Senator under the age of 55 voted NO on this America Last bill,” Schmitt posted on social media. “15 out of 17 elected since 2018 voted NO[.] Things are changing just not fast enough.”

    Just as revealing of the changing current in the party was the vote against the package by two GOP senators considered pillars of the party’s internationalist wing: Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Marco Rubio of Florida. Both also unequivocally defended Trump against criticism over his remarks at the South Carolina rally. That seemed to encourage Putin to attack NATO countries that have not met the alliance’s guidelines for spending on their own defense.

    To many observers, the retreat on Ukraine from Rubio and Graham suggests that even many GOP officials who don’t share Trump’s neo-isolationist views have concluded that they must accommodate his perspective to survive in a party firmly under his thumb. “Lindsey Graham is a poster child for the hold that Donald Trump has over the Republican Party,” Wendy Sherman, the former deputy secretary of state under President Joe Biden, told me.

    Republican elected officials still demonstrate flickers of resistance to Trump’s vision. In December, the Senate and the Republican-controlled House quietly included in the massive defense-authorization legislation a provision requiring any president to obtain congressional approval before withdrawing from NATO. The problem with that legislation is that a reelected Trump can undermine NATO without formally leaving it, said Daalder, who served as the U.S. ambassador to NATO under President Barack Obama.

    “You destroy NATO not by walking out but by just not doing anything,” Daalder told me. “If you go around saying ‘If you get attacked, we’ll send [only] a mine sweeper,’ Congress can’t do anything. Congress can declare war, but it can’t force the commander in chief to go to war.”

    Nikki Haley, Trump’s former UN ambassador and his last remaining rival for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, has stoutly defended the traditional Reaganite view that America must provide global leadership to resist authoritarianism. She has denounced Trump’s comments on NATO, and she criticized him Friday for his repeated remarks over the years praising Putin following the reports that Alexei Navalny, the Russian leader’s chief domestic opponent, had died in prison. On Saturday, in a social-media post, she blamed Putin for Navalny’s death and pointedly challenged Trump to say whether he agreed.

    Yet Haley has struggled to attract more than about one-third of the GOP electorate against Trump. Her foreign-policy agenda isn’t the principal reason for that ceiling. But Trump’s dominance in the race is evidence that, for most GOP voters, his praise for Putin and hostility to NATO are not disqualifying.

    The Chicago Council study released helps explain why. Just since 2017, the share of Republicans most favorable toward Trump who say the U.S. should play an active role in global affairs has fallen in the council’s polling from about 70 percent to 40 percent. Likewise, only 40 percent of Trump Republicans support continued military aid to Ukraine, the study found. Only about that many of the Trump Republicans, the Council found, would support sending U.S. troops to fulfill the NATO treaty obligation to defend the Baltic countries if they were invaded by Russia.

    By contrast, among the part of the GOP less favorable to Trump, majorities still support an active U.S. role in global affairs, sending troops to the Baltics if Russia invades, and continued military and economic aid to Ukraine. The “less-Trump” side of the GOP was also much less likely to agree that the U.S. should reduce its commitment to NATO or withdraw entirely.

    Conversely, Trump Republicans were much more likely to say that they want the United States to be the dominant world leader, while two-thirds of the non-Trump Republicans wanted the U.S. to share leadership with other countries, the traditional internationalist view.

    “Rather than the Biden administration’s heavily alliance-focused approach to U.S. foreign policy,” the report concludes, “Trump Republicans seem to prefer a United States role that is more independent, less cooperative, and more inclined to use military force to deal with the threats they see as the most pressing, such as China, Iran, and migration across the United States-Mexico border.”

    The Chicago Council study found that the most significant demographic difference between these two groups was that the portion of the GOP more supportive of robust U.S. engagement with the world was much more likely to hold a four-year college degree. That suggests these foreign-policy concerns could join cultural disputes such as abortion and book bans as some of the issues Democrats use to try to pry away ordinarily Republican-leaning white-collar voters from Trump if he’s the GOP nominee.

    Jeremy Rosner, a Democratic political consultant who worked on public outreach for the National Security Council under Bill Clinton, told me it’s highly unlikely that Trump’s specific views on NATO or maintaining the U.S. alliances with Japan or South Korea will become a decisive issue for many voters. More likely, Rosner said, is that Trump’s growingly militant language about NATO and other foreign-policy issues will reinforce voter concerns that a second Trump term would trigger too much chaos and disorder on many fronts.

    “People don’t like crazy in foreign policy, and there’s a point at which the willingness to stand up to conventional wisdom or international pressure crosses the line from charmingly bold to frighteningly wacko,” Rosner told me. “To the extent he’s espousing things in the international realm that are way over the line, it will add to that mosaic picture [among voters] that he’s beyond the pale.”

    Perhaps aware of that risk, many Republican elected officials supporting Trump have gone to great lengths to downplay the implications of his remarks criticizing NATO or praising Putin and China’s Xi Jinping. Rubio, for instance, insisted last week that he had “zero concern” that Trump would try to withdraw from NATO, because he did not do so as president.

    Those assurances contrast with the repeated warnings from former national-security officials in both parties that Trump, having worn down the resistance in his party, is likely to do exactly what he says if reelected, at great risk to global stability. “He doesn’t understand the importance of the [NATO] alliance and how it’s critical to our security as well,” Trump’s former Defense Secretary Mark Esper said on CNN last week. “I think it’s realistic that [if] he gets back in office, one of the first things he’ll do is cut off assistance to Ukraine if it isn’t already cut off, and then begin trying to withdraw troops and ultimately withdraw from NATO.”

    A return to power for Trump would likely end the dominance of the internationalist wing that has held the upper hand in the GOP since Dwight Eisenhower. The bigger question is whether a second Trump term would also mean the effective end for the American-led system of alliances and international institutions that has underpinned the global order since World War II.

    Ronald Brownstein

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