Romania
Willingly Becomes a U.S. Drone Base Aimed Against Russia
Anti-Russian Defender-Europe
2020 Exercises Stretch from the Baltic Sea to The Black Sea
by InfoBrics
February 3, 2020
The already existing
tensions in the Black Sea region have heightened because of the Defender-Europe
2020 exercises, which include ten participating states, including the Black Sea
state of Romania. Through these U.S.-led exercises, that are mostly aimed against Russia’s Kaliningrad enclave in the Baltics, the U.S.-made MQ-9 Reaper
reconnaissance and assault drones, made infamous for being used in the assassination of Iranian Lieutenant General Qassem Soleimani earlier this month, were deployed in Romania.
The presence of the
Pentagon’s and CIA’s strategic squadron on the Black Sea and close to Russia
does not contribute in any way to maintaining regional security, and rather
these offensive weapons that were used in the assassination of high-ranking
officials of enemy countries, aims to pressurize Russia further. The deployment
of such drones in Romania shows that the former Warsaw Pact country is
willingly going beyond its NATO responsibilities by becoming a critical staging
point for anti-Russian pressure.
Moscow has mentioned on
several occasions that it would consider these assault drones to be the
equivalent of medium-range missiles, banned by the Intermediate-Range Nuclear
Forces Treaty. Despite this warning, it had done little to influence the
decision of Warsaw to permanently host the drones at the Mirosławiec airbase in
western Poland.
The Romanian airbase Câmpia
Turzii is the host of these offensive weapons. Although in the event of a
military conflict in the Black Sea region, Russian anti-aircraft and missile
defense units could intercept and destroy unmanned targets, even those in
take-off position, this move to host offensive U.S.-made weapons is part of a
larger strategy to pressurize, isolate and contain Russia in the Black Sea.
Romania is not the only anti-Russian state
on the Black Sea –
Bulgaria and Turkey are also NATO members, and Ukraine and Georgia are
weaponized states with aspirations of joining NATO. The U.S. are effectively
leading efforts for a coalition against Russia in the Black Sea, even though it
is unlikely that these states have the combined power to challenge Russian
naval and aerial dominance in the region.
The U.S. Air Force Command
in Europe announced that the MQ-9 Reaper drones will be relocated to Romania
until spring to support a series of operations, gathering information,
monitoring and air reconnaissance in the Black Sea area. These drones can fly a
distance of 6,000 kilometers, a distance that can comfortably cover Moscow, St.
Petersburg and even the western fringes of Siberia. This is a dangerous
prospect for Russia considering that these drones are capable of not only
carrying out assassinations, but can also carry a nuclear warhead. The drones
have been used to deadly effect in Iraq and Afghanistan where it has begun
replacing piloted F-16 and A-10 flights by the U.S. air force.
The Pentagon has invested $3
million in the construction on a hangar and other sites in Romania for the
deadly drones. These facts confirm the existence of long-term plans to use
the Câmpia Turzii air base as an aerodrome for sending American drones to
strategic targets in Eastern Europe when need be, all with the aim of
pressuring Russia.
The Defender-Europe 2020
exercises primarily aims to put pressure on Kaliningrad, but the deployment of
these drones has now demonstrated that it is a multipronged exercise against
Russia that has expanded the focus of operations. Effectively the
Defender-Europe 2020 exercises stretches from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea,
in a show of force to demonstrate to Russia that any war with NATO will be
conducted across two seas and the entirety of its European land border with the
exception of perhaps Finland.
This move to turn Romania
into a U.S. drone base against Russia has wider aspirations for some leading
thinkers in Washington. Moldova, a neighobring Romanian-speaking country, has
been identified by the highly influential RAND think tank to become another
U.S. military hub on the Black Sea. This identification of Moldova also comes
as the U.S. military base network is expanding in Romania with the arrival of
500 U.S. servicemen in order to strengthen the Kogâlniceanu air base. Chisinau
has cooperated with NATO allies and partner states for several years through the
Partnership for Peace and the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council. Moldova
also bought weapons in 2018 in accordance to the Alliance’s standards. However,
the Moldovan Constitution ensures that the country is a neutral state, and
according to the polls, the majority of the population is against NATO
membership. Although RAND has identified Moldova to become a hub for the U.S.
military, this will unlikely occur, essentially meaning Washington’s
policymakers are concentrating on further militarizing Romania against Russia.
Although Romania is
consolidating its position in the anti-Russian bloc, the drones do cause a
matter of concern, but perhaps not seriously enough as Russia will have
confidence in its own air defense capabilities, especially with the famed S-400
missile defense system. This still does not deter the fact that Romania is
willingly becoming a hub for the U.S. military to oppose Russia.
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