NATO Extends Baltic Air Patrols Until
2018
by Slobodan
LekicBRUSSELS (BELGIUM)OfficialWire News Bureau
NATO has
decided to extend until 2018 an operation to protect the airspace of
Baltic members Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania with fighter jets, officials
said Wednesday.
An official
said Wednesday that while the allies have agreed to extend the mission,
they also are committed to finding a sustainable solution to patrolling
the Baltic states. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with
alliance regulations.
None of the
three Baltic nations, which joined NATO in 2004, have had fighter planes
since they seceded from the Soviet Union in 1991. As a result, larger
member nations have taken turns policing their airspace.
Normally, up
to four jets are deployed on four-month rotations, along with 50-100
ground crew. Since 2014, the air forces of Belgium, Britain, the Czech
Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland,
Portugal, Romania, Spain, Turkey, and the United States, have participated
in the missions.
The patrols
are carried out from an air base in Lithuania.
In 2010,
NATO decided to extend the air policing mission until the end of 2014. But
Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia wanted the mission to last at least until
2018 and for air policing to get the status of a permanent NATO mission.
NATO
Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen welcomed the extension, saying the
kind of cooperation exemplified by the Baltic Air Policing mission sets an
example for other collaborative projects within the alliance "as we
reconcile our security requirements with budgetary realities."
NATO wants
its 28 members to increasingly pool their military resources, as defense
spending across the alliance plunges due to the austerity measures
implemented by governments to cope with the ongoing economic crisis.
All three
Baltic nations border Russia, which has never been happy about the
eastward shift of NATO, its old Cold War foe. But Moscow has not objected
to the air policing arrangement.
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