NATO’s Upcoming Exercise Is Targeted
Against Kaliningrad
Will
Europe Be Willing to Go to War Against Russia?
by InfoBrics
January 27, 2020
Last
week NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg explained why the U.S. are strengthening
their military presence in Europe. The reason is unsurprisingly to pressurize
and intimidate Russia, but also against China and the so-called fight against
terrorism. Stoltenberg explained that there are now more U.S. soldiers in EU
Member States, more than ever since the collapse of the Soviet Union in
1991. In the coming months, the Defender-Europe 2020 exercises,
the largest of its kind in the last 25 years, will begin. And with this
exercise, U.S. troop numbers will only increase in Europe with another
20,000 troops and officers arriving.
Germany
will be the logistics center for the Defender-Europe 2020 exercise in March and
by the end of January, thousands of U.S. soldiers will not only arrive in
Germany, but also in Belgium, France and the Netherlands. The military
drill will take place in Germany, Poland, Georgia and the Baltic States
with the participation of 18 NATO countries, cover 4,000 kilometers of convoy
routes and rely on 10 European countries to host exercise activities. The
U.S. will send a total of 37,000 soldiers and officers to the exercise with the
total number of troops to exceed 40,000 people.
There
are also discussions about the resumption of the annual REFORGER exercises that
were held in Europe from 1969 to 1993. The REFORGER exercises was to have
constant training for a rapid deployment in West Germany in any potential
conflict with the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact countries. Lieutenant General Chris
Cavoli, the U.S. Army Europe commander, explained in an interview with Defense News that
the Defender-Europe 2020 exercises has been compared to REFORGER, but that this
is “not a completely apt comparison” because REFORGER exercises were about
getting a force into one country — Germany — “to defend a very-known location
against a force that we all understood very well.” He recalled hearing about
REFORGER exercises as a little boy when his father was an Army officer serving
in Europe but that “the only thing we didn’t know was what time it was going to
happen.”
There
can be little doubt that Russia is the main target of these exercises with the
drills occurring directly on their doorstep in Poland and the Baltic states,
particularly focussed against Russia’s Kalingrad enclave. As Russia continues
working towards a balanced multipolar international system based on
sovereignty, U.S.-led Atlanticist powers have maintained pressure against the
Eurasian Giant. NATO spy and scout planes flew over Kalingrad over 800 times in
2019 alone. NATO are keeping close tabs on the enclave as it is a
well-fortified region wedged between Poland the Baltics, a so-called security
threat for the Atlanticist Alliance.
In
response to the increasing military pressure by Russia against Kalingrad, the
Russian Foreign Ministry said in December that “Western media are trying to
spread their ideas about the ‘Russian aggressor’ in their own way. Some
media cite statements by the U.S. Air Force Commander in Europe, General
Jeffrey Harrigian, that the Pentagon has a plan to break through the
multilayered air defense of the Kaliningrad region in the event of Russia’s
invasion of the Baltic. It conceals the fact that the improvement of
military capabilities in the enclave is dictated solely by the reasons of
maintaining the balance of power.”
NATO
are constantly reinforcing their military presence near Russia’s borders and
are increasing the readiness to transfer forces to their eastern flank. The
intensity of the exercises is also significantly increasing in a way as if
Europe is preparing for a major military conflict against Russia. The
planned development of the European segment of the U.S. and NATO air defense
system also continues to move closer to Russia’s borders. It is for this reason
that Russia has had to turn Kaliningrad into a fortress with operationally
tactical complexes like the Iskander, in conjunction with the S-400 missile
defense system and anti-ship coastal complexes. Despite these systems, experts
still maintain that if NATO attacks Kaliningrad, the enclave is likely to fall,
providing Russia does not resort to the use tactical nuclear weapons.
Whether
these experts are correct or not can only be known in a real war situation, a
situation that Russia is attempting to avoid.
However, exercises suggest that
NATO is making every plan for an invasion of Kalingrad if such a war ever
occurs. However, with Europe, led by French President Emmanuel Macron becoming
increasingly critical of NATO and Washington’s policies, it remains to be seen
if EU countries are willing to go to war with Russia because of U.S.
escalations despite their participation in such aggressive exercises aimed
towards the Eurasian country.
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