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View Full Version : Russia's missile deployment in Kaliningrad ups the stakes for NATO



Gunny
03-28-2018, 04:44 PM
Russia's deployment of nuclear-capable missiles to its Kaliningrad exclave is setting off warning bells in the Baltics and at Nato.
This is not the first time that the Russians have deployed Iskander-M short-range ballistic missiles to Kaliningrad and it will not be the last. Indeed, some experts believe Russia's long-term plan is eventually to deploy the weapons permanently to the Russian enclave, sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania.
The Iskander-M system is relatively modern and was introduced into the Russian military in 2006. It is highly mobile - a pair of missiles are carried on a heavy-wheeled launcher. The missile is known as the SS-26 and code-named "Stone" by Nato. It is equipped with a variety of counter-measures to try to breach enemy defences. Fired from Kaliningrad, it can reach all of the Baltic republics and probably about two-thirds of Poland.
It is controversial on two counts - because of its range and because it is dual-capable. In other words, it can carry either a conventional or a nuclear warhead. Armed with a nuclear weapon, its range of in excess of some 500km (300 miles) brings it into the scope of the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty of 1987 which effectively bans the development and deployment of such weapons.
The US already believes that Russia has breached this treaty in its development work, but the regular deployment of the Iskander probably marks another nail in the coffin of the web of arms control agreements inherited from the Cold War.
Russia stresses that this deployment is part of a routine exercise. But equally, in the past it has brandished the Iskander system as a response to Nato's plans to deploy anti-ballistic missile defences in Europe. Russia has made several threats to target countries deploying elements of any missile defence system with nuclear weapons. Indeed, Russia's nuclear doctrine has also been re-written to afford a greater and earlier role for nuclear weapons in any regional conflict.
Poland and Estonia have both expressed concern at this latest deployment. The Chief of Staff of the Estonian Defence Forces, Lt Gen Riho Terras, sees the Iskander as part of a long-term Russian desire "to bring the Baltic Sea and the passages leading to it more and more under its control, and to control it much as it does the Black Sea".
Kaliningrad factshttps://ichef-1.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/AFB7/production/_91738944_russiakalin4640916.png

Koenigsberg, as the city of Kaliningrad was once known, was founded by Teutonic knights in the 13th Century. It was once the capital of Prussia
Annexed by Russia from Germany after WWII. Germans fled or were expelled
It is more than 300km away from Russia, which can only be reached through an EU country
It houses the Russian Baltic Fleet and is the country's only ice-free European port
The philosopher Immanuel Kant spent all his life in the city and died there in 1804

Kaliningrad profile (http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-18284828)
This is all part of a developing Russian strategy of what Nato characterises as an "anti-access and area denial": deploying weapons systems and sensors with ever-longer range (or, in the case of Kaliningrad, to a location where even relatively short-range will do) to push Nato forces away from the area.
Russia's long-range radars and air defence systems in Syria, for example, reach well out into the Mediterranean and into Turkish air space. The Estonian general's comments about the Black Sea are timely, since many Nato experts fear that it is fast becoming, in effect, a Russian-controlled lake.
The view from MoscowSeen from Moscow, however, the picture is very different. Russia has watched Nato expand its membership ever closer to Russian borders. Countries like the Baltic republics, whose territory was once part of the Soviet Union, are now active Nato members. It is a trend that Russian President Vladimir Putin - who sees the collapse of Soviet power as a major tragedy - will neither condone nor forget.
Nato is now reinforcing its military presence in the Baltics and Poland in response to Russia's growing assertiveness in the wake of its annexation of Crimea from Ukraine and its involvement in the fighting in eastern Ukraine. This again provides probably another motive for the deployment of the Iskander missiles.
Of course the debate has an element of the chicken and the egg. Where did the cycle of escalation actually begin? For Russia it is the original sin of Nato expansion, now worsened by ballistic missile defence and Nato military deployments (albeit very small) eastwards. For Nato it is Russian resentment, nuclear threats, and above all, its invasion and annexation of part of a sovereign country - Ukraine.

Russia's deployment of the Iskander serves multiple strategic purposes beyond the purely military. It is intended to remind the Western public - and particularly those in the Baltic republics (Lithuania has elections this weekend) - of the nuclear stakes in facing up to Moscow.
It is part of the signalling in a wider information war between Russia and Nato, where Moscow seeks to divide the Atlantic alliance and to secure for itself the ability to do as it pleases in what it sees as its near-abroad. Thus Russian-backed forces control parts of Georgia; Russia has annexed Crimea and backs pro-Russian militias in eastern Ukraine.
The problem for Nato is that the Baltic republics, whilst once Soviet territory, are now firmly within the Western camp. It has to draw clear lines to confront Moscow's influence while trying to avoid escalating any crisis further.


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-37600426

An interesting read for anyone that cares about Russia's regional muscle-flexing contest.

Gunny
03-28-2018, 05:23 PM
This ties in with it ...


Poland has signed an agreement to buy the Patriot missile defence system from the US, in a move that is likely to anger Russia.
President Andrzej Duda said the "historic" $4.75bn (£3.4bn) deal gave Poland "state-of-the-art" defences.
It follows reports that Russia had permanently deployed nuclear-capable missile systems in its territory of Kaliningrad, which borders Poland.
Ties between Poland, a Nato member, and Russia remain strained.
Moscow's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 has prompted Warsaw to speed up its military modernisation.
Earlier this week, Poland was one of many countries that expelled Russian diplomats in response to a nerve agent attack in the UK on 4 March. (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-43550938)
Moscow denies any involvement in poisoning former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in the southern English city of Salisbury.


Baltic warning over Russian move on Nato (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-38014997)
Russia's missile deployment in Kaliningrad ups the stakes for Nato (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-37600426)

So, what about the missile deal?The largest weapons agreement in Polish history was signed at a ceremony in Warsaw on Wednesday.
Defence Minister Mariusz Blaszczak said the Patriot missile defence system had "proven itself in numerous countries".
He added that his country was now "joining an elite group of states which have an efficient weapon that guarantees security".
Much of Poland's military equipment currently dates back to the era when communist Poland was in the Moscow-led Warsaw Pact, says the BBC's Adam Easton in Warsaw.
The first deliveries are expected in 2022.
This comes as the US is developing its controversial anti-missile shield in Europe.
In 2016, America activated a land-based missile defence station in Romania, and a similar base is being built in Poland.
Russia has repeatedly warned that the shield undermines its strategic nuclear deterrent.
What is Patriot?It is an advanced surface-to-air missile system designed to defend against aircraft, cruise and ballistic missiles.
The system, produced by US defence company Raytheon, is used by the US and a number of its Nato allies.
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/3E1D/production/_100610951_polandkaliningradrussia4640318.png
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-43574308

Seems anytime any of the Baltic States or Poland makes a move Russia doesn't like, Russia starts showing its missiles.:rolleyes:

I sometimes wonder if Russia has any adult supervision.

Kathianne
03-28-2018, 05:32 PM
Poland was supposed to get those under Obama, he cancelled the order while trying to make nice with the reset.

Gunny
03-28-2018, 05:34 PM
Poland was supposed to get those under Obama, he cancelled the order while trying to make nice with the reset.THAT's why I kept thinking we already did this :laugh: Thanks :)

Elessar
03-28-2018, 05:41 PM
Poland was supposed to get those under Obama, he cancelled the order while trying to make nice with the reset.

Just another one of Obama's Lilly-livered backing down on allies
and commitments.