© AP Photo / Gero Breloer
09:00 16.04.2018(updated 09:18
16.04.2018)Get short URL
The
Trident Juncture NATO drill, of the highest caliber ever held in Norway, is
expected to leave a mark on the nation's everyday life. In the course of four
months, over a hundred Norwegian municipalities will experience a marked
increase in traffic and noise, spurring the authorities into taking
unparalleled preparatory action.
In
total, the drill will feature 35,000 NATO soldiers from numerous member
states gathering in Norway, ranking among some of the most
extensive exercises held in the Scandinavian country in years,
affecting tens of thousands of ordinary Norwegians, national
broadcaster NRK reported.
While
the Trident Juncture drill itself, whose stated goal is to bolster
cooperation within NATO and with so far still non-aligned partner
states, is expected to take place from October 25 to November 7,
a large-scale presence of NATO forces will be felt in large swaths
of Norway for a period of several months.
In
total, over a hundred municipalities across the country will be
affected by increased traffic and noise in connection with the
extended traffic exercise. The Trøndelag, Møre og Romsdal, Oppland and Hedmark
counties will be most affected, but the military will be visibly active
in much of the country for a period spanning from August
to December.
According
to Lieutenant Colonel Ivar Moen, chief information officer at the
Norwegian Armed Forces Headquarters, the drill will stretch over a vast
territory stretching over 1,000 kilometers from north to south.
"There
will be aircraft activity from Bodø [in the north] to Fredrikstad [in
the south], Moen said, adding that the northernmost counties of Troms and
Finnmark will remain the only ones not affected by the drill.
The
Norwegian Directorate for Civil Protection (DSB) warned that traffic
problems due to extensive movement of personnel and material
through the country are likely to occur, urging fellow Norwegians to
"take one for the team."
"The
drill will show our ability to welcome NATO. And neither our own defense
nor NATO itself can cope without civil society support. So we talk
about close interaction between public Norway, private Norway and
volunteer Norway. This would also say something about our common ability
to cope with serious crimes should something serious happen,"
DSB deputy director Per-Kristen Brekke told NRK.
Lieutenant
Colonel Moen pledged that the Norwegian public would be given relevant information
on the exercises both in advance and on an ongoing basis
via radio broadcasts and military websites. Additionally civilian
authorities such as the police and traffic agencies will be forwarding
information from the military sources to the population.
"The
reason we are giving such early notice is to prepare and motivate the
public to welcome our allies. There will be many things to consider
for us, so we want to be as well prepared as possible. Then
we'll be able to concentrate on the exercise," Moen explained.
Norway
will become the primary host of the Trident Juncture drill,
with smaller offshoot exercises held in Finland, Sweden (both
currently non-aligned) and not least Iceland. NATO carries out a major
exercise of this kind every three years, with the most recent having
taken place in Portugal, Spain and Italy in 2015.
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