Johannes Stern
NATO defense ministers are meeting in Brussels today to consolidate
the military alliance against Russia, increasing the risk of a direct
military confrontation between nuclear-armed powers.
NATO sources have revealed plans to establish a long-term presence in Eastern Europe, according to a report in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung
(FAS). So-called NATO “Force Integration Units” will be established in
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania and Bulgaria. There are also
plans to deploy such a unit in Hungary at a later time.
The units
will consist of 40 soldiers each. They will be tasked with preparing
exercises for a new NATO rapid response force and coordinating military
activities in emergencies. Germany, which is spearheading the operation
this year, intends to deploy a total of 25 soldiers within the units.
The
ground troops of the rapid response force are to consist of a brigade
of some 5,000 soldiers. The goal is for their most flexible units to
have the capability to move to a new location within 48 hours. The
entire brigade will be trained and equipped to be able to move to a new
location within a week. The leadership of the operation will rotate
yearly between NATO member countries.
According to the FAS, NATO
defense ministers have already decided on the equipment to be provided
during the “test phase,” which is to last until the beginning of next
year. Starting in April, a company of German paratroopers will
supplement American units that have been stationed in the Baltic States
and Poland since last year.
Two weeks ago, the FAS revealed that
NATO defense ministers will convene the Nuclear Planning Group (NPG) at
the beginning of today’s meeting to discuss “the nuclear threat scenario
from Russia in the past few months.”
Unlike previous years,
according to the FAS, this will not merely be a routine meeting. An
analysis of threat scenarios worked out at NATO headquarters will be
presented to the defense ministers. Afterwards, the ministers “will for
the first time discuss the consequences for the nuclear strategy of the
alliance.” A separate consultation session is planned with France, which
is not a member of the NPG.
NATO’s nuclear simulations underscore
the fact that the imperialist powers are ready to risk nuclear war in
order to force Russia to its knees. In the past week, a number of
prominent figures, including former Soviet head of state Mikhail
Gorbachev, have warned of the danger of a Third World War if NATO, led
by the United States, continues to take aggressive measures against
Russia.
Under conditions of escalating fighting between troops of
the Western-backed Kiev regime and pro-Russian separatists in eastern
Ukraine, Gorbachev warned of a “hot war” that “could well inevitably
turn into an atomic war.”
On Sunday, the Süddeutsche Zeitung
quoted the Russian military expert Yevgeny Buchinsky, who warned that,
in response to an offensive against the Donbass by Kiev, “Russia will
have to intervene, and then, bluntly speaking, to take Kiev. Then NATO
would be in a difficult situation. Then you would have to start World
War III, which no one wants.”
In spite of such warnings, the imperialist powers and their proxies in Kiev are escalating the conflict. On Monday, the New York Times
revealed that the Obama administration is considering sending advanced
weapons to Kiev. The newspaper listed high-ranking current and former
administration officials and military officers who are pushing for such a
move.
The Times report triggered opposition among sections of the European elite. The Süddeutsche Zeitung
wrote that a decision by Washington to arm the Kiev regime with
offensive weapons would be taken by Russia as the equivalent of a
declaration of war. Russian officials and German Chancellor Angela
Merkel spoke against any such move during a visit to Hungary.
Washington
intends to use today’s NATO meeting to bring the member states into
line behind its provocative and reckless course. At the beginning of the
week, Alexander Vershbow, a former US ambassador to Russia and
currently the deputy secretary general of NATO, referred to “Russian
aggression” in Ukraine as a “game changer in European security.”
He
emphasized the necessity of deploying rapid response troops in Eastern
Europe, extending NATO’s reach in the east, and arming the Ukrainian
military. Referring to Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova, all former Soviet
republics, he said, “The more stable they are, the more secure we are.
So helping Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova—to strengthen their military
forces, reform their institutions and modernize their economies—is not
an act of generosity, it is in our fundamental strategic interest.”
He
added, “NATO is doing its part. To help Ukraine to modernize and reform
its armed forces, we have launched five trust funds to assist in areas
like command and control, logistics, cyber defense and military
medicine. We are sending more advisors to Kiev and will be carrying out
exercises with Ukraine’s armed forces. And we are helping Moldova and
Georgia to strengthen their defense capacity in similar ways, and, in
Georgia’s case, to help it prepare for future membership in the
Alliance.”
At the end of his speech, Vershbow warned: “This time
around, having chosen our course, we must stick to it. We must stay
united, stay firm and increase the costs to Russia of its aggression.”
Meanwhile,
voices in favor of arming Ukraine are growing louder. Michael Gahler
(Germany’s Christian Democratic Union—CDU), who is the spokesman on
security policy for the European People’s Party in the European Union
parliament, spoke in favor of sending weapons to Ukraine in an interview
on Deutschlandfunk radio.
Wolfgang Ischinger, leader of the
Munich Security Conference, which takes place this weekend, has adopted
the same line. On ZDF Television he spoke in favor of the “announcement
of possible weapons shipments” to Ukraine. “Sometimes one needs to use
pressure to enforce peace,” he declared. While he cautioned that Germany
should not send weapons, he said he could “imagine that other members
of the alliance would want to do this.”
Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko, whose regime was brought to power nearly a year ago by a
fascist-led putsch backed by the US and Germany, and has since waged a
brutal war against the population of eastern Ukraine, made an appearance
yesterday in Kharkiv, which is near the border with Russia and the
contested areas. He said that “we will need lethal weapons, and I am
sure that foreign weapons will be sent to Ukraine.” He continued: “I
don’t have any doubt that the US and other partners will provide help
with lethal weapons so that Ukraine will be able to defend itself.”
Poroshenko
will take part in the Munich Security Conference along with 20 other
heads of state and 60 foreign and defense ministers. He is meeting with
US Secretary of State John Kerry in Kiev today.
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