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Category Archives: NATO
Hecker takes command of US, NATO air operations in Afghanistan – AirForceTimes.com
Posted: April 12, 2017 at 8:23 am
Maj. Gen. James Hecker assumed command of 9th Air and Expeditionary Task Force-Afghanistan and NATO Air Command-Afghanistan Tuesday.
He is succeedingMaj. Gen. Jeffrey Taliaferro, who oversaw the introduction ofA-29 Super Tucano aircraft to the Afghan air force. The pilots, trained at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia, have flown roughly 900 close-air support missions since the first turboprops arrived in April 2016.
Theres no better leader at this point to take us forward in this mission, Gen. John Nicholson, commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, said at Tuesdays ceremony, according to Stars and Stripes, which first reported the change of command.
Hecker, a 1989 graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy, is a command pilot with more than 3,300 flight hours. He has commanded at the squadron, group and wing levels. Most recently, he led the 19th Air Force at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas, which trains more than 30,000 U.S. and allied students each year.
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Purged from Turkish army, NATO officers get asylum in Norway – Atlanta Journal Constitution
Posted: April 10, 2017 at 2:30 am
STAVANGER, Norway
Norway and Turkey NATO's northern and southern frontiers in Europe have been pillars of the Western military alliance for more than 60 years. But the diplomatic temperature between the two has fallen steadily since Turkey recalled dozens of military officers as suspects in an aborted coup and Norway became the first nation to grant some of them asylum.
The government in Oslo agreed last month to protect four Turkish officers who had been assigned to NATO and, like colleagues in Germany and Brussels, fear they could be imprisoned as terrorists if they go back to their country. Turkey's Foreign Ministry summoned the Norwegian ambassador for an explanation while the officers remain in Stavanger, a city on Norway's west coast that lies 3,800 kilometers (2,360 miles) from Ankara.
"We see that this is a difficult decision for Norway because of the alliance, and it can cause big problems for NATO, so we appreciate that they have put human rights over political decisions," one of the officers given asylum said. "Norway still says you are innocent until proven guilty ... in Turkey, you have to prove your innocence."
The men trying to forge new lives in Stavanger are among a cadre of commissioned Turkish officers who were working at NATO facilities around Europe during Turkey's July 15 thwarted coup. The Turkish government suspects of playing a role in the failed coup, and the men have asked not to be named for fear of reprisals against their families in Turkey.
"Some of my colleagues in other NATO headquarters did return to Turkey. They were detained at the airport in front of their families, their children. It would be very difficult to go back to Turkey now," one senior officer said. "We have small kids, and we have to save their lives."
The former officers bristle at being branded "traitors." Each man was on leave when the plot unfolded and claims he has a firm alibi. With their bank accounts frozen, their successful military careers suddenly cut short and hopes for fair trials in Turkey shattered, they say they had no choice but to seek asylum in Norway, where they filed for protection between August 13 and October 19.
One of the men was fired by telephone. Another received a call ordering him to leave Norway within three days. Two watched in horror as their names appeared on "blacklists" of soldiers commanded back to Turkey.
"When I saw the list and my name in the list, I tried to understand the reason ... but there was nothing about this on the paper. There were just one or two or three sentences calling us back," one said. "It was a terrible period. I knew I would lose my rights, my past, my family, everything."
The men say they have seen social media videos of other Turkish officers being tortured in jail and have desperately tried to reach military friends back home. They say some have disappeared, while others were forced into giving confessions.
"After the coup, 160 generals and 7,000 military officers have been arrested," one of the officers said bitterly. "If these persons were involved in this coup, the result must have been different."
The government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan alleges that the coup was carried out by followers of a U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, who denies orchestrating a takeover. More than 150,000 people have been taken into custody, fired or forced to retire from Turkey's armed forces, judiciary, education system and other public institutions since the coup attempt.
Even Gulenists who did not take part in the coup attempt are considered a serious security threat now and are being purged from Turkey's military. The four former officers in Norway deny being Gulen supporters and think the government is using the coup as an excuse to crush its critics.
"We are hearing that people's wives are accused of being plotters and traitors. If one of your relatives has money in a certain bank, or you were using certain social media on the day of the coup, you are accused of being involved," one said.
Turkey responded angrily to Norway granting the officers asylum, protesting that a NATO ally offered the men "support to abuse the country's political, social and economic opportunities" instead of ensuring their return to Turkey.
The men's lawyer, Kjell Brygfjeld, thinks the four cases were fast-tracked through the sometimes clogged Norwegian asylum system. One of the former officers said his asylum petition was approved without his needing to provide documents proving he was in danger.
"Norway can see what is going on," he said.
As political refugees, they face the possibility of never returning to Turkey and uncertain futures in NATO's northern outpost.
Dressed in the casual cold-weather wear of Norwegian civilians during an early spring evening on the Stavanger fjord, the four officers joked that they've already embraced a Nordic lifestyle.
And even though the winter nights seem long in Norway, they know that their situations could have been much darker.
"It's impossible for me to disconnect from Turkey," one of the officers said. "All of my friends most of the friends are now in jail. And their families suffer because of this. And there is just one voice in Turkey, so no one hears their screams."
David Keyton contributed to this report in Stavanger.
Follow Mark Lewis on Twitter @markantonylewis and David Keyton @DavidKeyton
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Eastern NATO Reinforcement Cuts Fear of Conflict, Estonia Says – Bloomberg
Posted: at 2:30 am
Kersti Kaljulaid.
Investors in the Baltic countries should brush off the perceived risk of a conflict between NATO and Russia in the region after the alliance deployed reinforcements to its eastern frontier, Estonias president said.
After the arrival of North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces to Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland in recent weeks, the international community has become less worried about a potential conflict in the area,Kersti Kaljulaid, Estonias first female head of state, saidThursday in an interview. So-called hybrid, or non-military risks stemming from Estonias former Soviet master are now a bigger danger and more focused on elections in other European countries.
Home to a large Russian-speaking minority, the Baltic region has been at the center of concern over expansionist rhetoric from President Vladimir Putin following Russias annexation of Crimea and support for the separatist war in Ukraine. The western response has included U.S. and European Union sanctions and an increased NATO presence in the continents east, with 3,500 U.S. troops arriving in Poland this year. While Putin has repeatedly denied having any designs on the Baltics, worries over security in the region resurfaced after Donald Trumps election triumph.
The perception is changing,Kaljulaid, 47, said in the capital Tallinn. While the implementation of NATOs decisions on troop deployments in Warsaw caused a lot of media interest, the NATO battalion has by now arrived, and we are assured that peaceful development, including economic development, will continue.
While Estonia has no foreign bonds, investors can speculate on its creditworthiness using credit-default swaps, which traded at 58 basis points on Thursday, a basis point above a two-year low of 57 reached on April 3 and a level of about 65 a year ago.
Entrepreneurs including Viljar Arakas, the head of Estonian asset manager EfTEN Capital AS, have said the increasing presence of NATO allies is difficult to reconcile with attracting more foreign investment. In January, Prime Minister Juri Ratas said baseless reports of elevated security risks were threatening Estonias business climate.
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The president has a largely ceremonial role in Estonia, representing the nation of 1.3 million people abroad and formally steering defense. Kaljulaid was elected last October as a last-minute compromise candidate after lawmakers and then the Electoral Body unexpectedly failed to pick a winner. Shes said in recent months that the increase inallied troops in the region doesnt mean NATO is preparing for a conflict, and shes urged media to refrain from sensationalizing security issues.
Still, NATOs risk assessment shows there is currently a threat to the bloc from our eastern neighbor, Kaljulaid said. Thats why the NATO battalion is needed here and why there have to be contingency plans for protecting the alliance in its northeastern corner.
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Deputy Secretary General: Ukraine is a valued NATO partner – NATO HQ (press release)
Posted: at 2:30 am
NATO Deputy Secretary General Rose Gottemoeller reaffirmed the Alliances strong support for Ukraine in a speech on Thursday (6 April 2017). Speaking at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, she said a recent meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Commission underscored the Alliances ongoing and steadfast support for Ukraines sovereignty and territorial integrity. The Deputy Secretary General said Ukraine is a valued NATO partner and that, NATO does not, and will not, accept Russias illegal and illegitimate annexation of Crimea. And we condemn Russias ongoing destabilization in eastern Ukraine.
Ukraine has been an important NATO partner for many years, having joined the North Atlantic Cooperation Council in 1991 and NATOs Partnership for Peace program in 1994. Ms. Gottemoeller said the country is making a great deal of progress on its reform agenda and it could rely on NATOs continued support on this issue.
Ms. Gottemoeller highlighted NATOs Comprehensive Assistance Package for Ukraine, which includes more than forty tailored support measures and six different multi-million-euro Trust Funds.
Among them is the Medical Rehabilitation Trust Fund, which provides support to wounded soldiers as well as to hospitals and physicians. Only last week, NATO opened a new rehabilitation facility in Kharkiv. In September, a Ukrainian team of athletes whom NATO helped to rehabilitate will compete in the 2017 Invictus Games in Toronto.
After her speech, the Deputy Secretary General met Ukraines President Petro Poroshenko, the Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman, Deputy Prime Minister Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze and other senior government figures.
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Ex-NATO commander: Trump-Russia relationship ‘going downhill’ – The Hill
Posted: at 2:30 am
A former supreme allied commander of NATO on Sunday described souring relations between the Trump administration and Russia amid a series of foreign policy collisions between the two countries.
"That relationship between the Trump administration and Russia is gradually going downhill, because I think the senior members of the Trump administration are beginning to realize that Russia is not a force for good in the world," retired Adm. James Stavridistold radio host John Catsimatidis on AM 970 in New York.
"I think reality is setting in about how difficult a partner Vladimir Putin will be, and I think events in Syria have underlined that for the administration," he added.
The attack was in response to a chemical weapons strike in northern Syria on Tuesday allegedly carried out by the regime of President Bashar Assad. That chemical attack left more than 70 civilians dead and many others wounded.
While the U.S. retaliation was largely hailed by world leaders, it drew a bitter response from Russia, a staunch backer of the Assad regime. A spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin called the strike an "aggression" and said the U.S. had violated international law.
The U.S. attack led the Kremlin to suspend an agreement between the two countries meant to lower the risk of in-flight collisions of U.S. and Russian aircraft in the region.
On the campaign trail, President Trump spoke fondly of Putin and expressed a willingness to increase cooperation between the U.S. and Russia.
The FBI and congressional investigators are currently conducting separate probes into Russian meddling in the U.S. presidential election and possible ties between the Trump campaign and Russia.
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NATO – News: Deputy Secretary General: Ukraine is a valued NATO … – NATO HQ (press release)
Posted: April 7, 2017 at 8:43 pm
NATO Deputy Secretary General Rose Gottemoeller reaffirmed the Alliances strong support for Ukraine in a speech on Thursday (6 April 2017). Speaking at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, she said a recent meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Commission underscored the Alliances ongoing and steadfast support for Ukraines sovereignty and territorial integrity. The Deputy Secretary General said Ukraine is a valued NATO partner and that, NATO does not, and will not, accept Russias illegal and illegitimate annexation of Crimea. And we condemn Russias ongoing destabilization in eastern Ukraine.
Ukraine has been an important NATO partner for many years, having joined the North Atlantic Cooperation Council in 1991 and NATOs Partnership for Peace program in 1994. Ms. Gottemoeller said the country is making a great deal of progress on its reform agenda and it could rely on NATOs continued support on this issue.
Ms. Gottemoeller highlighted NATOs Comprehensive Assistance Package for Ukraine, which includes more than forty tailored support measures and six different multi-million-euro Trust Funds.
Among them is the Medical Rehabilitation Trust Fund, which provides support to wounded soldiers as well as to hospitals and physicians. Only last week, NATO opened a new rehabilitation facility in Kharkiv. In September, a Ukrainian team of athletes whom NATO helped to rehabilitate will compete in the 2017 Invictus Games in Toronto.
After her speech, the Deputy Secretary General met Ukraines President Petro Poroshenko, the Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman, Deputy Prime Minister Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze and other senior government figures.
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NATO warships dock in Belfast for brief Northern Ireland visit … – Belfast Telegraph
Posted: at 8:43 pm
An extra special duo of visitors in the shape of two NATO warships are visiting Belfast.
The trio, led by group flagship, Norwegian frigate Roald Amundsen and Spanish frigate ESPS Reina Sofia arrived in Northern Ireland on Thursday night at Pollock Dock for a brief port visit during which they will meet with local leaders as well as enjoy a mini break in Belfast this weekend.
The ships are part of Standing NATO Maritime Group One (SNMG1) and fresh from completing their participation in the UKs tri-service multinational exercise Joint Warrior 17-1 (JW 171) off the north west coast of Scotland.
Read more: Belfast hosting fleet of Nato warships for the weekend
During that exercise the ships worked with nearly 30 highly capable warships and submarines from more than 10 allied and partnering countries.
The idea of the exercise Joint Warrior is to provide a range of scenarios and unique challenges to the command team, and to each ship, giving the ships and crews opportunities to sharpen their warfighting capabilities.
Commodore Ole Morten Sandquist, Commander SNMG1, exercised command over three additional warships during the exercise; Danish command and support ship HDMS Absalon and HDMS Vaedderen as well as German oiler FGS Bonn.
He described it as challenging training for the group.
Joint Warrior was very well planned and executed, he said.
It provided a range of challenging scenarios that could realistically be encountered in operations.
Together with professional and highly skilled counterparts, it gave us challenging and good training for use in a combined joint task force. We entered the exercise as a group of ships at a high level of readiness but left in even better shape. I am very pleased with the outcome of the exercise.
SNMG1 is one of four standing maritime forces composed of ships from various allied countries. These vessels are permanently available to NATO to perform different tasks ranging from participation in exercises to operational missions. They also serve as an oncall maritime force as a part of the NATO Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF).
SNMG1s main area of operation is to the North Atlantic, including the Baltic Sea. Their main objective is to provide immediate maritime capability to the NATO Alliance, enhancing maritime situational awareness, demonstrate solidarity, conduct routine diplomatic visits, exhibiting forward presence and contributing to operational interoperability among Allied naval forces to support greater regional security and stability.
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U.S. And NATO Special Ops Just Fought a Fake Guerrilla War in … – The Drive
Posted: at 8:43 pm
To the casual observer, the scene mightve looked like an odd cross between a reenactment of a past war and a demonstration of a future conflict. Elite special operators, some of whom were speaking foreign languages, were roving around the hills of West Virginia on foot, horseback, all-terrain vehicles, and by helicopter, while practicing specialized tactics, some of which are nearly a century old.
But this wasnt another remake of the movie Red Dawn or a weird time-traveling short story. It was a real life, routine exercise called Ridge Runner 2017 that occurred in February 2017. The particular group of participants including special operators from the Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, all of whom are NATO members and certain practice sessions suggested the event had a lot to do with Russias increasingly revanchist polices in Europe.
Broadly, Ridge Runners purpose is to provide challenging, realistic, and meaningful training, the training programs official website says. In a changing world where global security threats are taking new forms in an increasingly swift and unpredictable manner, Ridge Runner is a training opportunity for [special operations forces] and [general purpose forces] to enhance their readiness to meet these missions.
The West Virginia Army National Guard runs the irregular warfare program for the benefit special operations forces and conventional troops, other government agencies, and sometimes American allies, all of whom who want to make use of the states unique Advanced Mobility Training Area. The facility is huge, covering approximately 500,000 acres of both public and private land, which state and federal authorities use under land agreements with the owners.
US Army
Special operators conduct a mock sensitive site exploitation during Ridge Runner 2017.
The entire setup provides a real, populated zone with various natural and man-made features for troops and police to practice both containing mock insurgencies and terrorist movements in friendly territory and working behind enemy lines with local forces made up of other troops and civilian role players. The Pentagon refers to the latter task of training irregular forces in foreign countries to conduct guerrilla warfare against hostile governments or occupying forces as unconventional warfare.
The 2017 iteration included members of the U.S. Armys 10th Special Forces Group, the West Virginia Army National Guard, and the Pennsylvania Army National Guard, as well as the Baltic special operations forces. The West Virginia State Police also took part in the event.
Before Ridge Runner, during the Cold War, Green Berets had also trained in West Virginia as part of previous guerrilla warfare programs, including one known as Guerrilla USA. And the overall structure of newer training sessions, along with the practice area itself, shared many similarities with the Armys Special Forces capstone qualification exercise, nicknamed Robin Sage.
Held at various times throughout the year, Robin Sage puts the latest batch of Green Beret candidates through that unconventional warfare scenario set in the fake region of Atlantica that covers much of the United States eastern seaboard. The basic premise is that the trainees must support resistance forces in the Republic of Pineland North Carolina against invading forces from United Provinces of Atlantica, which stretches from Maine to Virginia.
US Army
The focus of Ridge Runner can be more varied, but the unconventional warfare tasks would be similar. During the 2017 iteration, troops and police conducted heli-borne raids against simulated militant camps and practiced hunting for insurgents with dogs, among other events. After assaulting the mock compounds, special operators trained on how to pick over the sites for possible intelligence, a skill known as sensitive site exploitation.
In addition, special operations forces learned how to perform less common military tasks. One of these events included covertly infiltrating into areas at night on horses. Some regions have roads that are too small for even small pickup trucks, if there are any roads at all, and animals might be the only mode of transport. American elite troops regularly practice how to utilize and care for both horses and pack animals like donkeys for specialized operations. In 2001, Green Berets famously rode around Afghanistan on horseback, supporting North Alliance fighters and fighting the Taliban.
Another task involved a nearly 100 year-old method of sending messages from hard to reach areas. During that practice session, elite troops strung a rope trapeze with the physical message between two poles. Contractors from Colorado-headquartered Rampart Aviation flew a de Havilland DHC-6 Twin Otter low enough that an individual in the back could grab the line with a grappling hook.
US Army
A contractor-operated de Havilland DHC-6 Twin Otter swoops down to pick up a message.
Pennsylvania dentist Dr. Lytle Schooler Adams invented this system in the 1920s. In 1937, he founded All American Aviation with the express purpose of picking up and delivering mail in remote regions. Between 1939 and 1949, his airline delivered approximately 75,000 pounds of mail to small towns and villages in Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and West Virginia, according to the National Postal Museum. Today, most people would know All American Aviation by its current name, U.S. Airways.
During World War II, Army aviators used the system to rapidly send orders and other information across the battlefield in lieu of radios. Early special operators also used the gear to deliver and recover equipment and intelligence from partisans and agents in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region. On top of that, the trapeze arrangement proved useful for getting downed troop gliders back into the air and even snatching individuals right off the ground. In the 1950s, inventor Robert Fulton improved on the basic principle to create his famous Skyhook recovery device.
For a special operations team today, the method could be useful if enemy forces had either jammed or tried to intercept radio communications, threatening to expose friendly positions or reveal sensitive information. Russian troops have employed electronic warfare systems to great effect, coupled with their own special operations forces on the ground, while supporting separatists in eastern Ukraine and government security forces in Syria.
US Army
A special operator on horseback during Ridge Runner 2017.
And if the presence of the Baltic special operations forces was any indication, it appears that Ridge Runner 2017 may have been inspired by Russia in other ways, too. While the mock insurgencies and counterinsurgencies might reflect missions American forces, both conventional and special operations, might expect in their near future, for Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian operators it is a scenario they might be able to imagine in their own back yards.
After Russia invaded Ukraines Crimea region in March 2014, subsequently annexed the peninsula, and began supporting armed separatists fighting Kievs authority in the countrys eastern Donbas region, many of Russias neighbors worried they might be next. Semi-autonomous republics inside the Soviet Union until 1991, all three Baltic countries also have significant ethnic Russian populations who have at times agitated for greater freedoms and accused government authorities of trying to stamp out their culture.
Since their independence, Baltic officials continued to worry about Kremlin-backed political movements, insurgencies, or even an outright invasion. In 2004, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania all joined NATO in no small part because of these concerns.
A brief war in 2008 between Russia and Georgia only served to reinforce those fears. Georgia was another former Soviet republic that had been waging a low-level counterinsurgency campaign against pro-Russian groups. Authorities in Tbilisi decided to make a push to recapture the breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but ended up routed by Moscows troops.
US Army
West Virginia State Police K-9 unit moves out.
Afterwards, in both of the de facto independent countries, the Russian Ruble became the official currency and citizens began to carry Russian passports, making it seem like total annexation was inevitable. The events in Ukraine, yet another former Soviet republic, only compounded the anxiety in the Baltic region.
Then, In September 2014, the Russian Federal Security Service, a successor to the Soviet KGB that is also better known by its Russian acronym, FSB, detained Estonian Internal Security Service officer Eston Kohver under suspicious circumstances. Moscow claimed Kohver had crossed the border was attempted to conduct an intelligence operation on Russian soil. The response from Tallinn was that the FSB had kidnapped him.
After a year in Russian hands, a show trial and a brief imprisonment, Kohver returned home as part of a prisoner swap. In a scene out of a Cold War spy drama, Aleksei Dressen, who Estonian authorities had charged with treason for working with the FSB, walked past Kohver on a bridge over Piusa River onto Russian soil.
US Army
Special operations forces assault a building during Ridge Runner 2017.
If a conflict with Russia or Russian-backed partisans were to break out in the Baltics, special operations forces would likely be key actors to either tackle anti-government groups or lead resistance against occupying forces. A stay-behind force led by special operators might be critical in the event of an actual invasion.
Thanks to the shared history of the Soviet Union, the capitals of present day Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are all less than 200 miles straight down a major highway from the Russian border. In Lithuanias case, the boundary is with Russias strategic enclave in Kaliningrad, which has significant forces permanently stationed within.
In February 2016, the RAND Corporation think tank released a shocking report suggesting that Russian troops could seize control of the seats of government in Estonia and Latvia within three days. More damning, according to the analysis, NATO would be hard pressed to stop the offensive or even counterattack, despite American efforts to improve their military capabilities near the alliances borders with Russia.
US Army
Baltic operators provide security during Ridge Runner 2017.
In 2014, President Barack Obama announced the beginning of the European Reassurance Initiative (ERI), which led to an uptick in training exercises, troop deployments, and aerial patrols along NATOs eastern flanks. The Pentagons dubbed the mission Operation Atlantic Resolve. In December 2016, American officials decided to accelerate the initial deployments of new rotating force packages in the Baltic States, Poland, and Romania. The first Army contingents began arriving the next month, which prompted Russian officials to say they would respond in kind to the "provocation."
But during the 2016 election campaign and after his victory and inauguration, President Donald Trump repeatedly stated his desire for better relations with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin. Even more worrisome to residents in Baltics was the language of one his most vocal supporters. I'm not sure I would risk a nuclear war over some place which is the suburbs of St. Petersburg, Republican politician and Trump surrogate Newt Gingrich said on CBS This Morning in July 2016.
Trumps election sent a shiver through the whole region, Eerik-Niiles Kross, an Estonian parliamentarian who formerly acted as the countrys intelligence coordinator, told The New York Times after the election in November 2016. So, Baltic officials may be inclined to prepare for any contingency, with or without American help.
Still, the lessons their special operations forces learned at Ridge Runner 2017 could only help with that type of planning.
Contact the author: jtrevithickpr@gmail.com
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U.S. And NATO Special Ops Just Fought a Fake Guerrilla War in ... - The Drive
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Trump Reminds Merkel What Germany Owes NATO – Forbes
Posted: at 8:43 pm
Forbes | Trump Reminds Merkel What Germany Owes NATO Forbes President Trump has many vices, but subtlety is not one of them. In his usual Saturday morning Tweet storm, the president denounced reports that he had anything other than, a GREAT meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the White House the ... |
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NATO marks International Day for Mine Awareness – NATO HQ (press release)
Posted: at 8:43 pm
NATO marked the International Day for Mine Awareness on Tuesday (4 April 2017), observed annually to highlight the deadly threat that mines pose to civilians lives and nations development. NATO has a strong track record in humanitarian demining, working with partners ranging from Ukraine to Afghanistan, and from Georgia to Egypt. To date, the Alliance has helped destroy more than 5 million anti-personnel landmines, as well as 642,000 pieces of unexploded ordnance.
Over the years, NATO has also trained thousands of experts in explosive ordnance disposal and counter-IED techniques. Following the March explosion at the Balaklia arms depot, NATO Science for Peace and Security (SPS) Programme is providing personal protection such as bomb suits and demining equipment, as well as communication systems to the State Emergency Service of Ukraine.
The NATO SPS Programme is also working in close cooperation with partner countries to develop advanced mine detection technologies to ensure a better, safer and more efficient demining process. Examples include: subsurface radar technology in Ukraine; devices suitable for demining in the Egyptian desert; and techniques tailored to under-water mine detection in Montenegro.
The United Nations General Assembly declared in 2005 that 4 April of each year shall be observed as The International Day for Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action.
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NATO marks International Day for Mine Awareness - NATO HQ (press release)
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