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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16904-2002Mar25.html


War Boosts NATO Hopes Of 2 Nations 
Romania, Bulgaria Gain New Relevance 

-"The big bang is real," said one diplomat from a NATO
country. "And I couldn't have imagined it possible
because I couldn't imagine September 11."
-The post-Sept. 11 strategic importance of the Black
Sea region, which has served as a staging area for the
Afghan war and could be used in an attack on Iraq, has
catapulted Romania and Bulgaria into serious
consideration for membership in NATO, according to
U.S., NATO and East European diplomats.
-In November and December, U.S. tanker aircraft based
in Bulgaria flew about six missions a day to refuel
warplanes in the Afghan theater, according to U.S. and
Bulgarian officials. A Bulgarian military airport in
the Black Sea is now a de facto U.S. base with about
200 Americans stationed there.
-"September 11 transformed the Black Sea into a
natural springboard," said the Romanian foreign
minister, Mircea Geoana.
-Romania and Bulgaria are refurbishing airstrips and
ports with the implicit promise that if the United
States wishes to use them in future campaigns,
including possible strikes against Iraq, they are
available for the asking.
-The United States had been particularly concerned
that the countries' military spending is low and that
their armed forces cannot "inter-operate" with NATO's.
Both countries have boosted their military budgets
above 2 percent of their gross domestic products in an
effort to accelerate the restructuring process and
modernize equipment. 
-A fifth country, Slovakia, also will be invited if a
former authoritarian leader, Vladimir Meciar, is not
returned to power in fall elections.






By Peter Finn
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, March 26, 2002; Page A01 


BUCHAREST, Romania, March 25 -- The post-Sept. 11
strategic importance of the Black Sea region, which
has served as a staging area for the Afghan war and
could be used in an attack on Iraq, has catapulted
Romania and Bulgaria into serious consideration for
membership in NATO, according to U.S., NATO and East
European diplomats.

The two countries are getting favorable consideration
despite long-standing concerns in Western capitals
about whether they are serious about democratic
reform, military readiness and efforts to fight
corruption.

With four or five other post-Communist countries all
but certain to receive invitations to join the
alliance at a summit in Prague in November, NATO is on
the threshold of its largest expansion ever.

Determined to be on that list, Bulgaria and Romania
are working closely with the United States in the
campaign in Afghanistan to show how valuable they can
be as military partners. The two countries "are making
the best use of this tragic opportunity," the
Bulgarian foreign minister, Solomon Pasi, said in an
interview here in the Romanian capital.

In November and December, U.S. tanker aircraft based
in Bulgaria flew about six missions a day to refuel
warplanes in the Afghan theater, according to U.S. and
Bulgarian officials. A Bulgarian military airport in
the Black Sea is now a de facto U.S. base with about
200 Americans stationed there.

Both countries have also opened their airspace
unconditionally and offered the use of all land and
port facilities. Twenty U.S. military flights to or
from Afghanistan cross Romania each day, officials
here said.

Bulgarian and Romanian troops are serving as
peacekeepers in Kabul and the Romanian government has
offered a specialized mountain unit for service in
Afghanistan. The two countries have each tripled their
presence in international peacekeeping missions in the
Balkans to free up allied troops for Afghanistan. And
a Romanian military facility in the Black Sea city of
Constanza is about to become a staging ground for U.S.
troops rotating in and out of the Balkans and possibly
other theaters, officials said.

"September 11 transformed the Black Sea into a natural
springboard," said the Romanian foreign minister,
Mircea Geoana.

And in the rush to impress the Bush administration,
viewed as the critical voice in determining the final
list of countries invited to join NATO, Romania and
Bulgaria are refurbishing airstrips and ports with the
implicit promise that if the United States wishes to
use them in future campaigns, including possible
strikes against Iraq, they are available for the
asking.

"The next time when [the United States] asks for
support, or needs support, Bulgaria will be an
excellent ally," Pasi said when asked about Iraq.
Romanian officials echoed his comments.

With Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other countries hosting
U.S. military bases wary of a possible attack on Iraq,
the offers have not gone unnoticed in Washington,
diplomats said.

U.S. officials continue to say that for the two
countries to secure an invitation to join NATO and
jettison their image as regional laggards, they must
speed political reforms, particularly regarding
endemic corruption. The United States and NATO have
specifically cited the countries' treatment of
minorities, notably the Roma people, also known as
gypsies.

In Romania, NATO officials have objected to the
erection of statues to commemorate a World War II
fascist figure. Romanian officials have pledged to
pass legislation allowing them to pull all the statues
down.

The United States had been particularly concerned that
the countries' military spending is low and that their
armed forces cannot "inter-operate" with NATO's. Both
countries have boosted their military budgets above 2
percent of their gross domestic products in an effort
to accelerate the restructuring process and modernize
equipment. At the same time, Romania is slashing the
ranks of its top-heavy military and moving to create a
professional, non-conscript army by the end of the
decade, officials said.

"I'm here to encourage both countries to sprint to the
finish line," said Richard L. Armitage, U.S. deputy
secretary of state, whose appearance at a summit here
today of 10 aspiring NATO countries underlines the
seriousness of the Romanian and Bulgarian claims on
membership. "The U.S. wants the widest possible and
most robust accession."

U.S. and NATO officials appear to have agreed that
Slovenia and the three Baltic states -- Lithuania,
Latvia and Estonia -- will get invitations. A fifth
country, Slovakia, also will be invited if a former
authoritarian leader, Vladimir Meciar, is not returned
to power in fall elections.

Albania, Croatia and Macedonia, also in attendance at
the summit, are not regarded as viable candidates.

But the possibility of seven countries joining NATO,
following the 1999 accession of Poland, the Czech
Republic and Hungary, is a significant turnaround from
just nine months ago. "The big bang is real," said one
diplomat from a NATO country. "And I couldn't have
imagined it possible because I couldn't imagine
September 11."

Russia's role in the anti-terrorism coalition has led
it to redefine its relationship with NATO and drop
many objections to membership for the Baltic nations,
which would become the first former members of the
Soviet Union to be added to the Western alliance.

In an unlikely coalition, Turkey and Greece have
united behind the candidacies of Romania and Bulgaria,
arguing that expansion in the alliance's south is
critical for security reasons because of transnational
crime and continued instability in places such as
Macedonia.

"There was a lack of dialogue between Greece and
Turkey," said Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit.
But now "we have interests -- the preservation of the
stability of the region." NATO expansion, he said,
cannot be limited to northern and central Europe. 

The foreign ministers of the four southern countries
are planning a joint trip to Washington to press the
case of Romania and Bulgaria. 

The region remains a corridor for trafficking in
weapons, drugs, cigarettes, illegal migrants and women
sold into sexual slavery. And the level of criminality
has been facilitated by rampant corruption, U.S. and
NATO officials said. 



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