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Top US general exhorts troops to stop 'great power war' by AFP Staff Writers Constanta, Romania (AFP) March 7, 2022 Top US General Mark Milley on Monday asked American troops stationed in Europe to display their resolve to prevent "a great power war" following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff is touring Europe to show Washington's "determination" to defend NATO's eastern flank in the face of Russia's aggression. Allies, spearheaded by the United States, have rushed thousands of troops to countries closer to Russia as fighting rages in non-NATO member Ukraine. "We need to make sure that we respond quickly, to demonstrate our strength and resolve, our support for that Alliance to prevent any further aggression by the Russians and to prevent a great power war," Milley told US soldiers stationed in an airbase near Constanta in southern Romania. "From 1914, the beginning of World War I to 1945, the end of World War II... 150 million people got slaughtered. ..... We don't want that ever to happen again," he said. He told AFP: "What is clear to me is the unity and resolve of NATO in the face of an unprecedented threat and the largest land conflict on the continent of Europe since 1945." The United States has around 67,000 soldiers permanently stationed in Europe. Nearly 15,000 additional troops have been deployed in the past weeks along a 1,200-kilometre (750-mile) arc along countries neighbouring Ukraine and Belarus, Russia's ally, in a bid to dissuade Moscow from advancing further. A total of 2,500 US soldiers have been placed in the three Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, 10,000 in Poland, 2,400 in Romania, 1,500 in Slovakia, 350 in Bulgaria and 200 in Hungary. Milley toured five of these nations in as many days in a whirlwind visit.
Sanctions, no-fly zone, diplomacy: the West's complex calculus to stop Putin Washington (AFP) March 5, 2022 Despite unprecedented sanctions and strong support for Ukraine, Western states have failed to stop the Russian onslaught and are even expecting things to get worse. But their options for intensifying pressure on President Vladimir Putin are likely to be limited. - More sanctions? - G7 countries promised Friday to impose "tough new sanctions" on Russia, and the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken pledged to " increase the extraordinary pressure we're already exerting." But there is not much ... read more
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