...  The Pentagon has ensconced itself permanently at bases in Poland, 
Lithuania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania and Kosovo and the hosts' troops - except 
for the last-named, a U.S.-spawned stillborn pseudo-state still not a member of 
the United Nations 32 months after its unilateral declaration of independence - 
have been dispatched to fight and die in Afghanistan.

In 21st century Europe armed forces exist not for territorial defense but for 
NATO and European Union deployments overseas. Military bases, facilities and 
installations are for billeting foreign troops and housing other nations' 
aircraft and military equipment, those of the U.S. in particular.  ...

 

...  The future conflicts mentioned - constantly emphasized - are tomorrow's 
wars, ones for which the current nine-year-old armed conflict in Afghanistan is 
a preparation.

Russia's foreign minister might want to take note of the fact.

 

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va 
<http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=21694> &aid=21694

 

Pentagon Forges NATO Proxy Armies In Eastern Europe

 

by Rick Rozoff

 


 <http://www.globalresearch.ca> Global Research, October 30, 2010


 
<http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/10/30/pentagon-forges-nato-proxy-armies-in-eastern-europe/>
 Stop NATO 

On November 19 and 20 the leaders of 28 North American and European nations, 
all the major Western military powers and their vassals, will gather in the 
capital of Portugal for this year's summit of the North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization.

Until recently held every other year, NATO summits are now annual events, with 
the last held in France and Germany in 2009 and the preceding one in Romania in 
2008.

Prior to last year's summit in Strasbourg and Kehl, the first held in two 
nations, four in a row had occurred in Eastern Europe: The Czech Republic in 
2002, Turkey in 2004, Latvia in 2006 and Romania in 2008. None of those host 
countries, of course, are anywhere near the North Atlantic Ocean. Neither are 
any of the 12 nations incorporated into the Western military bloc in the past 
11 years.

This year's summit will endorse the Alliance's first Strategic Concept for the 
21st century, a draft of which was crafted by a so-called group of experts led 
by former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and presented in a report 
entitled NATO 2020: Assured Security; Dynamic Engagement.

Despite NATO referring to itself as a "military alliance of democratic states 
in Europe and North America" and claiming that all its members' opinions carry 
equal weight - as though Luxembourg and Iceland could block or override the 
U.S., the world's sole military superpower as its current head of state proudly 
christened it last December - next month's summit will be a rubber stamp affair.

Everything the Pentagon and White House demand will be granted, most notably:

The subordination of NATO's theater interceptor missile initiative, the Active 
Layered Theatre Ballistic Missile Defence Programme launched in 2005, and the 
U.S.-German-Italian Medium Extended Air Defense System (MEADS) to a U.S. 
missile shield structure throughout all of Europe and into the Middle East.

The retention of at least 200 U.S. nuclear bombs on air bases in Belgium, 
Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Turkey.

A complementary cyber warfare "dome" over the European continent directed by 
the new U.S. Cyber Command. [1]

The qualitatively accelerated military integration of NATO and the European 
Union in the aftermath of the Lisbon Treaty entering into force last December 
1. A Portuguese adviser to President of the European Commission Jose Manuel 
Barroso recently affirmed "that the best solution for the enhancement of 
EU-U.S. relations would be that the European Union (EU) joins NATO." [2]

The continuation of both components of what are frequently (and artificially) 
presented as being contradictory: NATO's founding and core mission - the 
collective military defense of its member states - and its constantly expanding 
missions far outside the Euro-Atlantic region, with the war in Afghanistan the 
prototype and standard of the second.

The Lisbon summit will formalize and extend what has been underway in earnest 
since NATO's first war in 1999: The projection of the U.S.-dominated military 
alliance into an international intervention and occupation force. One that is 
moving steadily to the east and south of the European continent, which has been 
unified under NATO and will soon be subsumed under American missile and cyber 
warfare systems.

Washington and Brussels pretend to protect all of Europe from threats that do 
not exist - not from Russia, not from Iran and certainly not Syria and North 
Korea - in exchange for the Pentagon being permitted to move its military 
personnel and infrastructure along Russia's western flank from the Baltic Sea 
to the Black Sea and recruiting the host countries' youth for wars abroad. What 
in fact are NATO membership obligations.

Voice of Russia on October 27 stated that "Russia is pressing for a NATO ban on 
the deployment of substantial numbers of allied forces in the newly-admitted 
eastern member-nations," and recounted that last December Foreign Minister 
Sergei Lavrov handed NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen a proposal 
for a draft agreement on Russian-NATO relations which "sets a ceiling for the 
number of troops and weapons allowed for deployment" to the territory of the 
former Warsaw Pact and even the Soviet Union.

In doing so Lavrov resembled Afghan President Hamid Karzai periodically 
complaining of the U.S. and NATO killing his nation's civilians and the 
Pakistani government publicly bemoaning deadly American drone strikes in its 
tribal areas. What he urged was correct and important, but he knew that nothing 
would come of it.

The Pentagon has ensconced itself permanently at bases in Poland, Lithuania, 
Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania and Kosovo and the hosts' troops - except for the 
last-named, a U.S.-spawned stillborn pseudo-state still not a member of the 
United Nations 32 months after its unilateral declaration of independence - 
have been dispatched to fight and die in Afghanistan.

In 21st century Europe armed forces exist not for territorial defense but for 
NATO and European Union deployments overseas. Military bases, facilities and 
installations are for billeting foreign troops and housing other nations' 
aircraft and military equipment, those of the U.S. in particular.

U.S. F-15 Eagle fighter jets are currently patrolling the airspace over the 
Baltic Sea in Russia's neighborhood and are stationed at the Siauliai Air Base 
in Lithuania until the end of the year. 

The first long-term deployment of American anti-ballistic missiles - a Patriot 
Advanced Capability-3 battery with approximately 100 troops manning it - 
occurred this year in northeastern Poland near its border with Russia.

Last year Washington launched the world's first multinational strategic airlift 
operation at the Papa Air Base in Hungary. 

The U.S. Army's Task Force East operates out of Romania's Mihail Kogalniceanu 
Airfield and Babadag Training Area and Bulgaria's Novo Selo Training Range.

The U.S. continues to occupy the almost 1,000-acre Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo.

Shifting American nuclear bombs from NATO air bases in other parts of Europe to 
ones in the east like Lithuania's Siauliai, Estonia's Amari, Poland's Swidwin, 
Romania's Mihail Kogalniceanu and Bulgaria's Graf Ignatievo and Bezmer would be 
the simplest matter in the world - assuming it hasn't already been done. There 
would be less (which is to say no) publicity than that which accompanied CIA 
"black sites" in Lithuania, Poland, Romania and who knows where else on the 
territory of new NATO states.

A day never passes without U.S. warplanes flying over and warships visiting 
ports in Eastern Europe, without the Pentagon conducting military training and 
exercises including live-fire drills and full-scale war games in the region. [3]

Last month the U.S. participated in the Northern Coasts exercise in the Baltic 
Sea and the Jackal Stone 10 multinational military exercise in Lithuania and 
Poland, deploying USS Mount Whitney, flagship of the Mediterranean Sea-based 
Sixth Fleet, for the latter.

Throughout this month U.S. Special Operations Command is conducting training 
exercises in Hohenfels, Germany with troops from the Czech Republic, Lithuania 
and Poland "to seamlessly integrate on the battlefield" in Afghanistan.

"During the actual exercise, the Special Forces command element coordinated 
with conventional forces to provide Quick Reaction Force assistance." [4]

On October 11 Polish Army Lieutenant General Mieczyslaw Bieniek, recently 
appointed Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Transformation of the NATO command in 
Norfolk, Virginia, visited the NATO Joint Forces Training Centre in Bydgoszcz 
in his homeland to meet with Afghan generals and among other matters discuss 
"the situation in Afghanistan, current NATO-Afghan cooperation and its future 
challenges." [5]

A week later the Polish government extended the deployment of its 2,600 troops 
in Afghanistan. "The current mission was supposed to end on 13 October but at 
the government’s request the president decided to prolong it until 13 April 
2011." [6]

As the U.S.-based Polish NATO commander was in Poland, Polish troops were 
training at the Marseilles National Guard Center, 65 miles from Chicago, with 
the Bilateral Imbedded Staff Team A7 which will deploy to Afghanistan in 
January and which "trains through the State Partnership Program with members of 
the Polish military both here and in Poland to build relationships with 
coalition members." [7]

F-15C fighter jets of the sort currently deployed in the Baltic skies arrived 
at the Campia Turzii Air Base in Romania on October 21 for Operation Golden 
Lance, "a large-scale exercise involving more than 150 U.S. Air Force 
personnel, 10 fighter aircraft and dozens of pieces of support equipment." 

The commander of the 493rd Fighter Squadron in charge of the war games stated, 
"We're excited to bring our F-15C capability to demonstrate our air superiority 
skills, train with a formidable NATO ally and integrate our services on 
offensive counter-aircraft training missions."  

A major objective of the air combat maneuvers is to provide the U.S. Air Force 
with yet more opportunities to face off against Russian MiG-21s. 
  
The two nations' air forces "already share a common link," as Romanian air 
force units from the Campia Turzii Air Base "have performed the Baltic Air 
Police mission the 493rd FS is currently performing elsewhere in the world." [8]

On October 27 the U.S. 86th Airlift Wing and 435th Air Ground Operations Wing 
completed two weeks of joint exercises in Bulgaria in the context of Thracian 
Fall 2010, during which American personnel "were able to train and lead more 
than 1,000 Bulgarian paratroopers to successful landings from U. S. Air Force 
in Europe's newest tactical aircraft."

As to the purpose of such exercises, an American officer present for them said, 
"We are hoping by them [Bulgarians] being able to observe how we conduct our 
operations they will use this to enhance their own ability, from paratrooper 
operations to flying and one day be able to conduct exercises and even assist 
in future conflicts." [9]   

The future conflicts mentioned - constantly emphasized - are tomorrow's wars, 
ones for which the current nine-year-old armed conflict in Afghanistan is a 
preparation.

Russia's foreign minister might want to take note of the fact.

Notes

1) NATO Provides Pentagon Nuclear, Missile And Cyber Shields Over Europe
   Stop NATO, September 22, 2010
    <http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/09/22/2463> 
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/09/22/2463
2) Diário de Notícias, 22 de outubro de 2010
    <http://dn.sapo.pt/Inicio/interior.aspx?content_id=1692723> 
http://dn.sapo.pt/Inicio/interior.aspx?content_id=1692723
3) Baltic States: Pentagon’s Training Grounds For Afghan and Future Wars
   Stop NATO< September 30, 2010
    
<http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/09/30/baltic-states-pentagons-training-grounds-for-afghan-and-future-wars>
 
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/09/30/baltic-states-pentagons-training-grounds-for-afghan-and-future-wars
   U.S. Consolidates New Military Outposts In Eastern Europe
   Stop NATO, September 23, 2010
    
<http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/09/23/u-s-consolidates-new-military-outposts-in-eastern-europe>
 
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/09/23/u-s-consolidates-new-military-outposts-in-eastern-europe
4) U.S. European Command, October 26, 2010
5) North Atlantic Treaty Organization
   Allied Command Transformation
   October 20, 2010
6) Polish Radio, October 18, 2010
7) LaSalle News Tribune, October 22, 2010
8) U.S. Air Forces in Europe, October 26, 2010
9) U.S. Air Forces in Europe, October 28, 2010







Rick Rozoff is a frequent contributor to Global Research.   
<http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=listByAuthor&authorFirst=Rick&authorName=Rozoff>
 Global Research Articles by Rick Rozoff

        

 

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