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Ukraine urges NATO for 'deterrence package' against Russia by AFP Staff Writers Riga (AFP) Dec 1, 2021 Ukraine's foreign minister called on NATO Wednesday for a "deterrence package" to stop Russia launching an invasion of his country, at a meeting with top diplomats from the alliance. NATO has been discussing how react to a military build-up by Moscow close to Ukraine's border amid fears from Western nations that Russian President Vladimir Putin could be planning an incursion. Ukrainian foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba called for a three-pronged approach involving clear communications to Moscow, readying a package of sanctions and increasing military support to Kiev. "We are confident that if we join efforts, if we act in a coordinated fashion, we will be able to deter President Putin and to demotivate him from choosing the worst-case scenario, which is a military operation," he said as he joined the meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Riga. NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg warned after talks among allies on Tuesday that Russia would face a "high price" if it launches an operation against Ukraine and said alliance members could impose sanctions. NATO itself does not decide on sanctions. Ukraine, which has seen its push to join the US-led bloc stall, has been receiving increased military support from NATO allies. Moscow, which seized Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 and backs separatists fighting Kiev, has strongly denied it is currently plotting an attack and blames NATO for fuelling tensions. Russian President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that military exercises and other moves by the West and Ukraine threaten Russia's security, warning against crossing the Kremlin's "red lines". "Look, they spoke about a possible Russian military intervention in Ukraine at the beginning of the year. But as you see this did not happen," Putin said. The new build-up follows a similar surge in the spring, when Russia gathered around 100,000 troops on Ukraine's borders but later announced a drawdown.
Russia seeking to destabilise and split Europe: Latvian PM In an interview with Agence France-Presse, Prime Minister Krisjanis Karins described the build-up as "disturbing" and said it was the latest in a series of interconnected actions by the Kremlin including limits on gas supply, its buttressing of the regime in Belarus and disinformation. Speaking after Latvia hosted NATO foreign ministers for a meeting in Riga, he called for NATO to boost its presence on the eastern flank of the alliance in the face of the Russian behaviour. The build-up of troops on the border with Ukraine's pro-Moscow separatist regions prompted a warning from Washington that Russia was planning aggression in its neighbour and renewed fears of the flare-up of the conflict that began in 2014. "This is all part of one interconnected set of events which seems to be on some level to destabilise or to create disunity in Europe," Karins said. The "additional troops near the Ukrainian border is disturbing at least, because it's not clear what the Russian intent is," said Karins, whose country shares a border with Russia and like its two fellow Baltic states Estonia and Lithuania is a member of both the EU and NATO. On the strategy of Russian President Vladimir Putin, he said: "I believe also that Putin's doctrine of somehow recreating a Russian-speaking empire, somewhat similar to the Soviet Union or other certainly seems high on the agenda." - 'Pulled together' - He said that the West should step up all kinds of assistance to Ukraine -- including military training and armaments -- as this would reduce rather than increase the risk of conflict. "We should not be concerned about helping Ukraine because if there is a clear signal that we in the West would assist Ukraine more that could stop a further escalation," he said. "If Russia were to get the idea that there would be no resistance that would be a bigger risk of actual heightened military conflict," he added. He said that when Europe talks to Russia it should negotiate from a "position of strength" given that the European economy is far bigger than the Russian economy. "Just as Europe is on some sense dependent on Russian fossil fuel exports, Russia is dependent on Europe cash imports. We are not at all a weak (European) Union," he said. He argued that in the face of the Russian efforts to create disunity in Europe both NATO and the European Union had "pulled closely together" again and the alliance's meeting in Riga had showed this. "NATO as a military alliance has of course a broad range of options," in case of Russian aggression, pointing to "heightened and targeted economic sanctions, probably very broad" that could be imposed. He also reaffirmed the request from Baltic states for a stepped up NATO presence on their borders. "At this point it would be very proportionate and understandable if NATO increased its footprint, also in the Baltics. It's not only a question of numbers but of capabilities, technologies and abilities."
AFRL working to develop future workforce Wright-Patterson AFB OH (SPX) Nov 30, 2021 Ensuring a steady supply of technical and scientific expertise for American industry and innovation has been a national priority since about 1957 when the Soviet Union launched its first Sputnik. Today, however, with the increasingly rapid pace of high technology, the need to attract young people to the field of advanced technical manufacturing has become even more critical. To meet that need, the Air Force Research Laboratory recently tasked NextFlex with finding ways to attract students who might not ... read more
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