US Boosts Forces In Europe As NATO Names Russia ‘Most Significant and Direct Threat’


The Pentagon will also base more destroyers in Spain and F-35s in the United Kingdom.

By JACQUELINE FELDSCHER | JUNE 29, 2022 11:07 AM ET (with comments by Chan Kai Yee in this rebloger’s notes.)

The Pentagon will further increase its presence in Europe in response to Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, the Defense Department announced Wednesday. (This rebloger’s note: Russia’s military moves divert US priority to Europe from Asia-Pacific as Europe demands its protection.)

The moves follow NATO’s decision to name Moscow “the most significant and direct threat to allies’ security and to peace and stability in the Euro-Atlantic area” in a new strategy agreed to at the summit in Madrid. (This rebloger’s note: The US wants Europe to regard China as the most significant and direct threat, but Russia’s moves have made the US fail to do so. See his note later.)The new strategy updates a 2010 document, in which NATO said it was pursuing “a true strategic partnership” with Russia, showing just how much the relationship has deteriorated over the past decade because of Moscow’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and February invasion of Ukraine.

The United States will change its troop presence in multiple eastern European allies, including permanently headquartering the Army’s V Corps in Poland and increasing training exercises and “heel-to-toe” deployments with Baltic allies, according to a Defense Department fact sheet. The Pentagon will also maintain the deployment of a brigade combat team in Romania, a change that was announced in February as Russia prepared to launch its invasion of Ukraine. The increased American presence is in addition to the NATO battlegroup that was stationed in Romania after Russia’s invasion.

The Defense Department is also boosting its forces in Germany and Italy. More than 600 troops will be stationed in Germany as part of an air defense artillery brigade headquarters, a short-range air defense battalion, a combat sustainment support battalion headquarters, and an engineer brigade headquarters. A short-range air defense battery will be stationed in Italy, adding about 65 personnel.

The Pentagon will also increase the equipment in the region, including stationing two additional Navy destroyers in Rota, Spain, and an additional squadron of F-35s at the Royal Air Force Lakenheath base in the United Kingdom.

There are currently more than 100,000 American troops in Europe. Celeste Wallander, the assistant defense secretary for international security affairs, would not share the total number of additional American troops that will be stationed in Europe “for security and operational planning reasons.”

Wallander told reporters that the additional troops in eastern Europe, including permanently headquartering V Corps in Poland, does not violate the NATO-Russia Founding Act, a 1997 document in which NATO committed not to permanently station troops on Russia’s border.

“The NATO-Russia Founding Act makes a commitment for no substantial combat forces,” she said. “Therefore, the decision to permanently forward station the V Corps Headquarters forward command post…it’s consistent with that commitment and our understanding of the NATO-Russia Founding Act.”

NATO’s new strategy also mentions China for the first time,” saying that its “ambitions and coercive policies challenge our interests, security, and values.”

The People’s Republic of China’s “malicious hybrid and cyber operations and its confrontational rhetoric and disinformation target allies and harm alliance security,” the strategy says, though it also says the alliance is “open to constructive engagement with the PRC.” (This rebloger’s note: For US protection, Europe has made the concession to mention China as a a chellenge but not as an adversary as the alliance is “open to constructive engagement with the PRC”, unlike the US who feels that its world hegemony is threatened by China, Europe does not feel threatened by China but wants to profit from China’s fast growing vast market where Europe and the US compete with each other intensively.)

The strategy also addresses other challenges for the alliance, including fighting terrorism, investing in emerging technologies, and combating climate change. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told reporters Wednesday that the alliance committed to cut emissions nearly in half by 2030 for its own platforms like AWACS surveillance planes and its Brussels headquarters. The alliance also aims to reach net zero by 2050.

“We can not choose between having green militaries or strong militaries. They must be both,” Stoltenberg said.

Source: Defense One “US Boosts Forces In Europe As NATO Names Russia ‘Most Significant and Direct Threat’”

Note: This is Defense One’s article I post here for readers’ information. It does not mean whether I agree or disagree with the article’s views. Some of my comments can be found in this rebloger’s notes.


NATO to Approve ‘Biggest Overhaul’ Of Defense Since Cold War, Leader Says


The alliance’s response force is to grow from 40,000 to 300,000 troops, Stoltenberg announced.

JACQUELINE FELDSCHER | JUNE 27, 2022 09:38 AM ET

NATO will grow its quick reaction force nearly tenfold, to “well over 300,000” troops, to better protect the alliance’s eastern front in response to Russia’s war in Ukraine, NATO leader Jens Stoltenberg announced Monday.

The alliance is expected to formally adopt the change this week at its summit in Madrid, where leaders will also approve a new strategic document for the next 10 years, discuss a boost in defense spending and approve more aid for Ukraine.

“These troops will exercise together with home defense forces, and they will become familiar with local terrain facilities and our new pre-positioned stocks, so that they can respond smoothly and swiftly to any emergency,” Stoltenberg said at a press conference. “Together, this constitutes the biggest overhaul of collective defense and deterrence since the Cold War.”

The NATO Response Force is currently a group of about 40,000 troops that can deploy quickly wherever needed. Members of the high-readiness force were deployed for a deterrence-and-defense mission for the first time in February after Russia invaded Ukraine. The group had earlier been used for missions such as security during the 2004 Olympics in Athens, assistance during the evacuation from Afghanistan, and disaster relief following Hurricane Katrina.

The force, which was last enlarged in 2014 after Russia illegally annexed Crimea, is made up of troops from allied nations that do year-long rotations.

Stoltenberg said allies will need to spend more on defense to be able to fill this growing need for troops and replenish the military aid many are giving to Ukraine. In 2014, NATO set a guideline for members to spend 2 percent of gross domestic product on defense by 2024. Even after eight straight years of growth, Stoltenberg said the alliance should be aiming higher.

“Two percent is increasingly considered a floor, not the ceiling,” he said.

Nine NATO members are now at or above that 2 percent defense-spending target, Stoltenberg said. Nineteen have “clear plans” to reach that spending level within the next two years, and another five have made “concrete commitments” to hit that goal after 2024.

Stoltenberg also said NATO is expected to announce a new assistance package for Ukraine at the summit, which will include “substantial deliveries” of gear, including secure communications, anti-drone systems, and fuel. NATO will also announce a long-term plan to help Ukraine end its use of Soviet-era platforms and begin using modern NATO equipment, something that many Ukrainian officials have asked for.

In Germany, G7 leaders considered their own additional aid to Ukraine on Monday after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed the meeting. Member nations are expected to approve another round of sanctions targeting Russia’s defense industry and technology sector, and are also in broad agreement on setting a price cap for Russian oil, though the details of the latter proposal are still being debated, a senior administration official told reporters on Monday.

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said the U.S. is also planning another tranche of weapons to Ukraine, including advanced air defense capabilities.

“As [Biden] told President Zelenskyy, we do intend to finalize a package that includes advanced medium and long-range air defense capabilities for the Ukrainians, along with some other items that are of urgent need, including ammunition for artillery and counter-battery radar systems,” Sullivan told reporters, according to a pool report.

One major question hanging over the NATO summit is the status of Finland and Sweden’s applications to join the alliance, which have been stalled by Turkey because of Sweden’s support for a Kurdish group that Ankara has designated terrorists. Stoltenberg said the leaders of Turkey, Finland, and Sweden will meet Tuesday in Madrid on the sidelines of the summit to try to make progress on negotiations to allow Finland and Sweden to join the alliance.

Asked if Finland and Sweden may be able to take the first steps to joining before the summit, Stoltenberg was careful not to set any expectations.

I will not make any promises, but I can just assure you that we are working actively to ensure progress,” he said. “It’s too early to say what kind of progress you can make by the summit.”

Source: Defense One “NATO to Approve ‘Biggest Overhaul’ Of Defense Since Cold War, Leader Says”

Note: This is Defense One’s report I post here for readers’ information. It does not mean whether I agree or disagree with the report’s views.


US Military Hard Up while Chinese Military Has Unlimited Budget


U.S. service chiefs testify before the Senate Armed Services Committee / AP

U.S. service chiefs testify before the Senate Armed Services Committee / AP

The following full text of Washington Free Beacon’s article tells us how hard up US military is, but at the same time Chinese military has unlimited budget (see the relevant section of my book “Space Era Strategy: The Way China Beats The U.S.”):

Service Leaders: Military Can’t Defend Homeland if Sequestration Persists

Budget cuts risk force’s ability to counter threats from adversaries like China, Russia

September 15, 2016 4:32 pm

The leaders of the four U.S. military services said Thursday that their forces will not be able to defend America if sequestration continues.

In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee, leaders of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force agreed that budgetary constraints and uncertainty have forced the services to invest in current readiness at the expense of other priorities.

Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz.), a Navy veteran and the chair of the Armed Services Committee, asked each of the service leaders if they believe they “would have the resources and ability to defend this nation against present and future threats if we continue down this path of sequestration.”

They all replied no.

Thursday morning’s hearing was convened to spotlight long-term budgetary challenges facing the U.S. military and featured testimony from Gen. Mark Milley, chief of staff of the Army; Adm. John Richardson, chief of naval operations; Gen. Robert Neller, Commandant of the Marine Corps; and Gen. David Goldfein, chief of staff of the Air Force.

In opening remarks, each of the service leaders explained that sequestration and budgetary uncertainty have forced them to make trade-offs, prioritizing readiness to meet current commitments at the expense of modernization. They emphasized that budgetary constraints threaten the U.S. military’s ability to provide adequate forces in the event of a conflict with global competitors such as China and Russia.

Defense spending has been squeezed each year as a result of the 2011 Budget Control Act, which has been projected to cut $500 billion from defense spending in the decade after its passage. The Defense Department has also weathered billions of dollars in cuts as a result of sequestration, which went into effect in 2013.

McCain noted during opening testimony that the current defense budget is more than $150 billion less than it was in fiscal 2011.

“Rising threats and declining budgets have lead to shrinking military forces that are struggling to sustain higher operational tempo with aging equipment and depleted readiness, and doing so at the expense of modernizing to deal with the threats of tomorrow,” McCain said. “Our services are cannibalizing themselves to keep up with recent deployments.”

Military officials and government reports have consistently shed light on the negative effects of budgetary constraints on the force. According to a Government Accountability Office report issued earlier this month, the military has reported persistently low readiness levels amid continued demands on forces. The Pentagon also lacks a comprehensive plan to rebuild readiness across the services, according to the report.

Milley said that the Army will be challenged to sustain current counter-terror operations for several years while simultaneously rebuilding its “capability in ground combat against higher-end, near-peer, great power threats” given budget constraints. He said that any future contingency operation with an emerging competitor would “likely require significant commitment of U.S. Army forces on the ground,” which the service would struggle to provide.

“Currently, the Army provides 52 percent of all the global combatant commander demand for military forces, and we provide 69 percent of all the emerging combatant commander demand, and currently we have 187,000 soldiers committed in 142 countries globally conducting the nation’s business,” Milley said.

“To sustain current operations at that rate and to mitigate the risks of deploying an unready force into future operations, the Army will continue to prioritize and fully fund readiness over end strength, modernization, and infrastructure. In other words, we are mortgaging future readiness for current readiness,” Milley said.

Richardson characterized the current challenges facing the Navy as a “triple whammy,” citing high demand for naval forces abroad, budgetary uncertainty, and declining resource levels and budget controls. The naval chief said that the “high-op tempo” at which the Navy has been operating since the September 11, 2001, terror attacks has worn out its ships and sailors.

“Funding levels require us to prioritize readiness only for our deploying units. These are ready for full-spectrum operations, but we are compromising the readiness of those ships and aircraft that we will have to surge to achieve victory in a large conflict,” Richardson said. “We have also curtailed our modernization in a number of areas critical to staying ahead of our potential adversaries.”

Neller stated that the Marines’ future readiness will be compromised if current budget projections hold.

“Based on the current topline and the future budget projections, and though we are meeting our current requirements, I believe we are now pushing risk in the long-term health of the force into the future,” Neller said.

Goldfein called on Congress to provide sustained funding so the Air Force can pay for new aircraft, modernize its “aging nuclear enterprise,” and have the flexibility to retire aging weapons and buy new technology to counter the advancements of America’s adversaries.

He also said that the projected manpower for the service for fiscal 2017—420,000 airmen, 317,000 of whom will be active duty—will not be enough to deter and defeat threats from competitors.

“Based upon current and projected global demands for air power to deter and if required defeat challenges presented by China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea, and violent extremism, we respectfully request your support to grow our force to 321,000 active-duty airmen by the end of fiscal year 2017,” Goldfein told lawmakers.

He called for the repeal of sequestration and said that predictable, sustained funding was “essential” to the success of the Air Force.

“Current global security demands remind us that America’s joint team must be ready to engage anytime, anywhere across the full spectrum of conflict, all while defending the homeland and providing a safe, secure, and reliable strategic nuclear clear deterrent,” Goldfein said.

The House and Senate are currently in negotiations over fiscal 2017 defense policy legislation that could boost the defense budget by $18 billion through a war funding account.

Source: Washington Free Beacon “Service Leaders: Military Can’t Defend Homeland if Sequestration Persists”

Note: This is Washington Free Beacon’s article I post here for readers’ information. It does not mean that I agree or disagree with the article’s views.

Source: Chan Kai Yee “Space Era Strategy: The Way China Beats The U.S.”