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Baltic states tackle defence spending after Crimea takeover
by Staff Writers
Vilnius (AFP) March 28, 2014


Baltic states hail a decade in NATO amid Ukraine crisis
Vilnius (AFP) March 29, 2014 - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania on Saturday marked a decade since joining NATO just as rising concerns over Russia's territorial ambitions in eastern Europe have reinforced the importance of the Western military alliance.

Two US fighter jets roared across sunny skies in Lithuania as President Dalia Grybauskaite hailed NATO membership as "vitally important" to Baltic security.

"Our expectations about Lithuania's security have been fulfilled. NATO partners have demonstrated that we do not face threats alone," she said.

The three Baltic countries of 6.3 million people were under Moscow's thumb before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, and Russian action against Ukraine has rattled nerves in the region.

"We would be a grey zone if we did not join NATO, that would be a danger," pensioner Antanas Spundys told AFP as he watched the fly-over.

NATO began an air policing mission over the Baltic states when the trio joined the alliance on March 29, 2004, in a move seen as a bulwark against unwanted Russian overtures.

The United States sent six extra F-15 fighters to boost Baltic air patrols this month, bringing their total to 10 aircraft.

Washington also said it was considering rotating troops in the Baltic region, while Britain, France and Denmark also pledged more warplanes.

At ceremonies at the foot of the iconic Freedom Monument in Latvia's capital Riga, President Andris Berzins insisted on Saturday that "Latvia is now safer than it has ever been".

"If NATO had existed in 1940, history might be very different," student Arnis Adams told AFP, referring to the start of five-decade Soviet occupation during World War Two.

Meanwhile in Tallinn, Estonian defence minister Sven Mikser said Russian actions in Ukraine demonstrated that NATO countries are "much safer today" than those, like Ukraine, that are outside the alliance.

Wary of their powerful neighbour Russia, Lithuania and Latvia plan to double defence spending by 2020 up to NATO's recommended benchmark of 2.0 percent of GDP, having made cuts during recent periods of severe economic austerity.

Estonia has said it will maintain its defence spending, which is already at 2.0 percent.

Wary of their powerful neighbour Russia, the Baltic states of Lithuania and Latvia plan to double defence spending while Estonia will maintain its strong level after watching Moscow take over Crimea.

The three countries of 6.3 million people will mark on Saturday a decade since joining the NATO military alliance, a move seen as a bulwark against unwanted Russian overtures.

Relations between the Baltic states and Russia have been tense since they broke free from the crumbling Soviet Union more than two decades ago.

But security fears have risen in the ex-Soviet states since Russian forces intervened in Crimea, leading to a disputed referendum and the annexation of the Russian-speaking Ukrainian peninsula.

Estonia and Latvia are also jittery that their large ethnic-Russian minorities, which make up a quarter of the population in both countries, could make them vulnerable to interference from Moscow.

"Russia's aggression against Ukraine brought some politicians back to the reality that it is important to finance defence," Lithuanian Defence Minister Juozas Olekas told AFP on Friday.

Lithuania and Latvia say they will increase defence spending by 2020 to NATO's recommended two percent of gross domestic product, from the current level of one percent of GDP.

They had slashed military spending as part of austerity measures designed to pull their economies back from the brink of collapse during the global financial crisis.

Estonia already meets NATO's two percent benchmark and "does not plan to increase or decrease spending", defence ministry spokesman Peeter Kuimet told AFP.

"As we see what is happening in Ukraine, we realise once again just how fragile freedom is," Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite told parliament this week as parties across the political spectrum vowed to spend more on the military.

"Until help arrives, we must be able to defend ourselves."

The moves to boost spending come after US President Barack Obama said Wednesday he had "some concern about a diminished level of defence spending" among NATO members.

"The situation in Ukraine reminds us that our freedom isn't free," Obama said in Brussels. "We have to be willing to pay" for mutual security to ensure the maintenance of a "deterrent" force.

- No illusions -

But none of the Baltic states has any illusions that they could defend themselves without NATO help in the face of any imminent Russian threat.

"It's important to counterbalance current developments with adequate NATO deterrence measures by strengthening the NATO and allied presence in the Baltic region," Latvian Defence Minister Raimonds Vejonis told AFP on Friday.

"Rapid security developments in Ukraine indicate the importance to react immediately on short notice."

Since Moscow's entry into Crimea, both NATO and Washington have been at pains to emphasise their commitment to mutual defence under Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty.

Visiting Vilnius last week, US Vice President Joe Biden said Washington was mulling whether to send forces to the Baltic states.

He also stressed the United States' "ironclad" commitment to mutual defence under NATO.

The US has already sent six extra F-15 fighter jets to boost NATO's long-standing air patrols over the Baltic states along the Russian border.

Britain, Denmark and France also offered additional warplanes.

NATO has deployed AWACS reconnaissance aircraft to overfly Poland and Romania as part of its efforts to monitor the crisis in Ukraine.

The regional tension in the Baltics has moreover spawned a spike in interest in military service unseen in the last decade.

"The number of military service requests increased by 20 percent in March compared to the same period last year," said Captain Skomantas Povilionis, spokesman for Lithuania's defence chief.

Germany ready to give military aid to Baltic states over Ukraine crisis: report
Francfort (AFP) March 29, 2014 - Germany is ready to provide military assistance to the three Baltic nations, all former Soviet republics, as part of NATO efforts to counter fears over Moscow's swift absorption of Crimea, German weekly Der Spiegel reported Saturday.

The defence ministry in Berlin could send "up to six air force planes for air policing operations to the Baltic" region, the news magazine said in its online edition.

Germany also stands ready to provide a navy vessel.

A decision will be announced during a NATO meeting in Brussels on the Ukraine crisis on Tuesday, Der Spiegel added.

A foreign ministry official contacted by AFP said Germany would "take part, if necessary, in stepped-up routine operations within the alliance perimeter".

Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have been rattled by Moscow's territorial ambitions in Ukraine after the ouster of the country's pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych last month.

The three Baltic states which joined NATO in 2004 on Saturday marked the 10th anniversary of their membership.

In Vilnius two US fighter jets roared across sunny skies as Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite hailed NATO membership as "vitally important" to Baltic security.

The three countries of 6.3 million people were under Moscow's thumb before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

US Vice President Joe Biden said earlier this month Washington could dispatch forces to the region to reassure the ex-Soviet NATO allies which are nervous about Russia's takeover of Crimea.

Washington has already sent six extra F-15 fighter jets to step up NATO's air patrols over the Baltics, and Britain, Denmark and France have also offered aircraft.

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MILPLEX
Lithuanian leader calls to double military spending by 2019
Vilnius (AFP) March 27, 2014
Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite on Thursday urged the government to more than double its defence budget over five years amid tension following Russia's takeover of Crimea. The Baltic nation currently spends 0.8 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) on defence. That is well below the NATO target of two percent, in part due to huge cuts made during the global financial crisis. ... read more


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