NATO can put troops wherever it wants, new secretary-general says
Stoltenberg was visiting NATO member Poland to reassure it that NATO
would provide the protection it sought against its former communist
master, Russia, which in recent months has annexed the Crimean Peninsula
from Ukraine, and been accused by the West of sending troops and
equipment to back pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine.
At a summit a month ago, NATO leaders agreed to set up a
"spearhead" rapid reaction force that could be sent to a hotspot within
days, and to pre-position equipment and supplies in eastern European
countries to receive the force if needed.
But they rejected appeals from NATO members in Eastern
Europe, including Poland, to station thousands of troops there
permanently -- partly because of the expense, and partly because they
did not want to break a 1997 pact under which NATO promised Russia it
would not permanently station significant combat forces in the east.
Stoltenberg appeared to take a tougher line in Poland, however.
"Next year, at the ministerial meeting, we will take
decisions regarding the so-called spearhead but, even before it is
established, NATO has a strong army after all. We can deploy it wherever
we want to," Stoltenberg told the state broadcaster TVP Info.
"These capabilities already exist. We have them, and we
can deploy them in individual regions. And this is only an add-on to
what the alliance already has."
Stoltenberg, a former Norwegian prime minister, took over
on Wednesday as NATO secretary-general, at a time when the alliance is
wrapping up its combat mission in Afghanistan but faces new challenges
from a resurgent Russia to the east and from Islamic State militants on
the borders of Turkey, NATO's southernmost member.
NATO has made clear it will not intervene militarily in
Ukraine, which is not an alliance member, but has reinforced the
defenses of its eastern member states. Russia has repeatedly denied
sending forces or equipment to the rebels in eastern Ukraine.
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