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Lithuania leader marks 'breakthrough' German troop deployment
By Vaidotas Beniusis
Vilnius (AFP) July 7, 2016


Russian actions caused 'loss of trust' with NATO: Merkel
Berlin (AFP) July 7, 2016 - German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Thursday that Russia's actions in Ukraine had eroded mutual trust with the West, speaking on the eve of a major NATO summit in Poland.

"If through words and deeds the validity of (international) law and the inviolability of borders are questioned, then of course trust is lost," she told the German parliament.

When NATO leaders meet in Warsaw, "it will be in a phase in which the security situation has significantly changed in Europe," she said, also pointing at turmoil in Syria, Iraq and Libya.

The US-led alliance plans to finalise its biggest revamp since the collapse of the Soviet Union to counter what it sees as a revanchist and unpredictable Russia since the start of the conflict in eastern Ukraine and Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea.

Among the plans is the deployment of four multinational battalions to the Baltic nations and Poland on a rotational basis.

Merkel said that "Russia's actions have deeply disturbed our eastern allies" and require a "clear reassurance" of their safety under NATO's Article 5 on collective defence.

The German leader -- a Russian speaker who has maintained dialogue with Russia's President Vladimir Putin throughout the Ukraine crisis, despite their differences -- also said the West must keep talking with Moscow.

"Deterrence and dialogue, the clear commitment to solidarity with our alliance partners pursuant to Article 5 of the NATO Treaty, and the outstretched hand of dialogue -- these are not contradictory, no they are indeed indivisible," she said.

A German government source who spoke on condition of anonymity said that the battalions' deployment would provide an "additional guarantee" requested by Russia's neighbours whose "fears are great" in the face of what they consider to be a bigger threat.

"In recent years we have seen a deterioration of the situation in the east, we have seen that Russia has massed troops in the west" of its territory, the source added.

Vice chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, leader of the Social Democrats who may challenge Merkel in a general election next year, criticised NATO's tough stance on Russia.

"We need to ask ourselves whether the world will really be better if the two sides conduct military exercises at the border, add military equipment and threaten each other," he told the daily Passauer Neue Presse.

Germany's decision to deploy a battalion of troops to Lithuania under a NATO initiative marks a "mindset breakthrough" for Berlin towards taking a leading role in European defence, the Lithuanian president said Thursday.

"I think we are at a historic turning point," Dalia Grybauskaite said in an interview with AFP in Vilnius on the eve of a key NATO summit, which will to seal its biggest revamp since the Cold War to counter a resurgent Russia.

"A breakthrough is occurring in the German mindset -- time for self-doubt, fear, reluctance to take responsibility, and dread of what Putin might think, is over," she added, referring to the strongman Russian president.

Fears that Russia could attempt to attack NATO's three small formerly Soviet-ruled Baltic member states surged after Moscow's 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, a move that sent East-West relations to their lowest point since the Cold War.

NATO leaders on Friday will finalise plans to deploy four battalions to the Baltic nations and Poland.

Germany will lead a battalion deployed to Lithuania, Canada to Latvia, Britain to Estonia and the United States to Poland, diplomats told AFP on condition of anonymity. Each battalion will have 600-1,000 troops.

The historic burden of Nazism has made EU heavyweight Germany a reluctant military leader, but Grybauskaite said Berlin's role in security will only increase once Britain leaves the bloc.

"With Britain withdrawing from the EU ... responsibility for stability in Europe will increasingly fall on the shoulders of Germany -- not only for economic stability, but also for security," Grybauskaite said.

"No matter what we think about elections in the US, we can witness the strategic direction that the United States will hand over more security responsibility to Europeans," she added.

- 'Trust is lost' -

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Thursday in Berlin that Russia's actions in Ukraine had eroded mutual trust with the West.

"If through words and deeds the validity of (international) law and the inviolability of borders are questioned, then of course trust is lost," she told the German parliament.

When NATO leaders meet in Warsaw, "it will be at a time in which the security situation has significantly changed in Europe," she said, also pointing at turmoil in Syria, Iraq and Libya.

Grybauskaite also dismissed Russian accusations of the US-led alliance provoking an arms race in the region, insisting the West was simply reacting to Moscow's moves in Ukraine.

NATO will hold fresh talks with Russia on July 13, just days after the landmark alliance summit.

The NATO-Russia Council (NRC) brings together ambassadors from the 28 NATO member states and Russia, and met regularly until the Ukraine crisis plunged relations with Moscow into the deep freeze.

Russia's ambassador to NATO Alexander Grushko told AFP: "The main focus will be on the military security in the wake of decisions to be taken at the NATO summit in Warsaw.

"We hope for a frank and serious dialogue on the issues related to the increased NATO activities near Russian borders and their impact on the security and stability in Europe and its regions."

US permanent representative to NATO Douglas Lute said Thursday that "from NATO's perspective, the foundation of our relationship with Russia is a balance between strength and dialogue.

"We're going to do what we need to do on the strength side of the equation, but we'll equally be open to dialogue with Russia, because we think that balance represents the right and responsible approach to NATO-Russia relations."


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Brussels (AFP) July 4, 2016
NATO is set to hold formal talks with Russia shortly after a summit in Warsaw this week where the alliance will endorse a military buildup following the Ukraine conflict, chief Jens Stoltenberg said Monday. In April the NATO-Russia Council held its first meeting since June 2014 when relations were effectively frozen, and the talks ended in "profound disagreements" over Ukraine and other issu ... read more


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