US leads the race
The US military is working with the State Department and NATO allies to provide support to Ukraine. Evelyn N. Farkas, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on May 6, «we will use all available tools to provide meaningful cost-effective support to Ukraine’s security institutions». DOD officials also continue to engage with their Ukrainian counterparts, Farkas said, noting thata high-level US-Ukraine meeting is scheduled next month. The United States is also taking steps to support non-NATO partners – such as Moldova and Georgia, she said…
Some senators are pushing Mr. Obama to take tougher, faster action against Russia. Carl Levin, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and Bob Corker, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, want the administration to examine the possibility of permanently stationing US forces in the Baltic republics.
At that, just 6% of Americans would use force over Ukraine, says a Pew poll.
Last month the U.S. Navy began deploying the Standard Missile 3 Block 1B interceptor designed to counter ballistic missiles. The system is widely believed to have strategic missile kill capability. It is planned for fielding on U.S. warships home-ported in Rota, Spain, and starting in 2015 at an interceptor base in Romania which is currently under construction. An earlier version of the ship-based interceptor was redeployed to the Black Sea for a short period in April amid resurgent tensions with Russia. Some NATO countries have explicitly linked the missile shield to the goal of deterring it. Poland announced in March that as a response to the events in Ukraine, it would accelerate the timetable for acquiring a domestic antimissile capability that would be linked to the NATO system. It’s worth mentioning that a Senate bill was filed at the beginning of the month that would require the U.S. government to study speeding up by several years the schedule for deploying next-generation Block 2A interceptors in Poland. The US acts as a bully perfectly knowing Russia cannot stand idle in front of the threat.
Russia’s response
The US missile defense effort has not gone unnoticed in Russia. «
We feel the symptoms of the work on various segments of the [missile defense system being intensified»
, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov was quoted as saying on May 6.
Ryabkov also warned that Western missile defense moves could jeopardize the New START arms control accord. Russian Defense Ministry's head of international military cooperation Sergei Koshelev said
NATO had rejected a proposal to hold an "expert dialogue" on the issues related to the missile defense shield.
Russia could deploy short-range Iskander missiles in the country’s westernmost Kaliningrad region if NATO decides to strengthen its military presence in Eastern Europe, Lt. Gen. Yevgeny Buzhinsky told RIA Novosti. «Russia is a nuclear power», he said.
«If NATO becomes more active, we will deploy a division of Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad Region», he added. General Buzhinsky
previously headed the department of international agreements in the Russian Defense Ministry.
Franz Klintsevich, Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on Defense, told RIA Novosti that deployment of NATO infrastructure in Eastern Europe and in the Baltic States endangers these countries and Russia should diplomatically deliver this message to the leadership of these states. «A serious object in the Lithuanian territory, any modern nuclear weapon – means Lithuania basically doesn’t exist anymore, and politicians should understand that, this is a serious issue», Klintsevich said.
It is important to add that the NATO’s actions are an outright breach of the Russia-NATO Founding Act of 1997 which states that NATO, given the«current and foreseeable security environment», wouldn’t pursue «additional permanent stationing of substantial combat forces» in Eastern and Central Europe. "
Peace Forces Must Take Sides!!!!
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