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Germans, Belgians land in Lithuania for NATO deployment

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The first group of German and Belgian troops arrived in Lithuania on Tuesday, part of a NATO move to reinforce its eastern flank in a bid to deter a militarily resurgent Russia.

A group of German officers landed in the Baltic state's capital Vilnius to coordinate the deployment of a 1,200-strong battalion that will include forces from several NATO members.

Hours earlier, some 30 Belgian troops arrived at another airport in western Lithuania while a ship carrying logistical equipment docked at the Baltic Sea port of Klaipeda, Lithuania's military spokesman captain Andrius Dilda told AFP.

Last summer, NATO ordered continuous troop rotations on its eastern flank as a tripwire against Russian adventurism in states formerly under Moscow's control.

Apart from the German-led battalion in Lithuania, Canada will lead a multi-national battalion in Latvia, Britain in Estonia and the US in Poland.

Vilnius University analyst Deividas Slekys said the deployments would force Russia to think twice about any provocations in the region.

"The deployment of a well-armed battalion makes a snap intervention scenario less likely. Russia will need to calculate how Washington, London or Berlin would react," he told AFP on Thursday.

The historic burden of Nazism has made EU heavyweight Germany a reluctant military leader.

Lithuania's President Dalia Grybauskaite has called Berlin's decision to lead the NATO battalion a "breakthrough" toward it playing a greater role in European defence.

The deployment began days after the inauguration of maverick US President Donald Trump who has suggested he may seek to improve ties with Moscow.

The NATO operation has sparked anger in the Kremlin, which insists that the US-led alliance is trying to encircle Russia.

The first group of German and Belgian troops arrived in Lithuania on Tuesday, part of a NATO move to reinforce its eastern flank in a bid to deter a militarily resurgent Russia.

A group of German officers landed in the Baltic state’s capital Vilnius to coordinate the deployment of a 1,200-strong battalion that will include forces from several NATO members.

Hours earlier, some 30 Belgian troops arrived at another airport in western Lithuania while a ship carrying logistical equipment docked at the Baltic Sea port of Klaipeda, Lithuania’s military spokesman captain Andrius Dilda told AFP.

Last summer, NATO ordered continuous troop rotations on its eastern flank as a tripwire against Russian adventurism in states formerly under Moscow’s control.

Apart from the German-led battalion in Lithuania, Canada will lead a multi-national battalion in Latvia, Britain in Estonia and the US in Poland.

Vilnius University analyst Deividas Slekys said the deployments would force Russia to think twice about any provocations in the region.

“The deployment of a well-armed battalion makes a snap intervention scenario less likely. Russia will need to calculate how Washington, London or Berlin would react,” he told AFP on Thursday.

The historic burden of Nazism has made EU heavyweight Germany a reluctant military leader.

Lithuania’s President Dalia Grybauskaite has called Berlin’s decision to lead the NATO battalion a “breakthrough” toward it playing a greater role in European defence.

The deployment began days after the inauguration of maverick US President Donald Trump who has suggested he may seek to improve ties with Moscow.

The NATO operation has sparked anger in the Kremlin, which insists that the US-led alliance is trying to encircle Russia.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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