The U.S.-led alliance’s aim is to train and exercise, but it is also “sending a very clear message to our nations and to any potential adversary,” NATO Jen Stoltenberg told a news conference this week.
“NATO does not seek confrontation,” Stoltenberg said. “But we stand ready to defend all allies.”
For three weeks starting Oct. 21, more than 36,000 personnel from all 28 NATO allies and eight partner nations, as well as over 160 aircraft and 60 warships, are taking part in exercises across a broad swath of southern Europe stretching from Portugal to Italy.
The No. 1 objective of the maneuvers, codenamed Trident Juncture,
is to ensure NATO’s beefed-up Response Force is up to the job, and that the United States and its allies can respond promptly and in unison to a crisis.
For more than a year, the 28-nation alliance has been in the throes of a major makeover, largely in response to Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and support for a pro-Russia separatist insurgency in eastern Ukraine, but also to better meet the new types of security threat represented by Islamic State and other armed extremist organizations.
“The last time NATO regularly held exercises of this magnitude, we were in the midst of the Cold War, facing the Soviet threat,” Alexander Vershbow, Stoltenberg’s deputy and the ranking American civilian at NATO, said at last month’s official opening of Trident Juncture at Trapani air base in Sicily.
“Now, we have a far more unstable and potentially more dangerous situation,” said Vershbow. “In this new world, NATO’s allies and partners must be able to move quickly and act decisively.”
Earlier this week, more than 500 paratroopers from the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, parachuted onto a military training ground in northeastern Spain after a nine-hour flight aboard C-17 Globemaster IIIs from their home base at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
“High ceiling, low winds, bright sky — it’s a beautiful day to be a paratrooper,” remarked Master Sgt. Patrick Malone, 31, of Stow, Ohio, a member of the brigade’s advance party.
Earlier in the day, also as part of Trident Juncture, 1,800 troops from 12 NATO nations, backed by helicopters and tanks, simulated an attack against an imaginary enemy holed up in a mock village at the San Gregorio training ground near the Spanish city of Zaragoza.
The displays, to which NATO top brass and civilian leaders have been invited, were meant to showcase the alliance’s military muscle and the trans-Atlantic bond it was founded to safeguard.
And NATO has said it wants other countries to witness what it’s doing. It said three Russian inspection teams arrived in late October to examine Trident Juncture activities in Italy, Portugal and Spain, and that “in the interest of promoting transparency,” observers from 11 other countries, ranging from the United Arab Emirates to Mexico, have also been invited.
So far, the Russians appear unpersuaded. They stayed away from Wednesday’s events at the San Gregorio training grounds, according to German Army Gen. Hans-Lothar Domroese, Trident Juncture’s commander.
On Monday, Alexander Grushko, Moscow’s permanent representative to NATO, told the Rossiya-24 television channel that the “key process underway” at NATO these days is military planning he said indicates the U.S.-led alliance is moving “from the policy of partnership to the policy of containing Russia.”
The exercises, which end tomorrow, will test the new, ultrafast-response “spearhead force” of 5,000 ground troops that has been created to reinforce NATO allies under threat in as little as two days. The war games, which took two years of planning, were rejiggered to add areas where many NATO officials say the alliance has been deficient, including defending against cyberattack.
Even if Trident Juncture is deemed a success, some observers say NATO must do more to adapt. Retired Adm. James Stavridis, dean of The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and former NATO supreme allied commander, said he has been discouraged by the alliance’s “tepid response to Syria,” its inadequate measures taken for cyberdefense and the continuing reluctance of many European allies to spend more on their militaries.
When it comes to NATO’s success in remaking itself, the former supreme commander said, “if you want a letter grade, I’d say a B minus.” John-Thor Dahlburg, AP
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