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Danish jets arrive in Lithuania amid regional tensions
by AFP Staff Writers
Siauliai, Lithuania (AFP) Jan 28, 2022

Four Danish F-16 fighter jets have arrived in Lithuania after the country appealed for a greater NATO presence due to Russia's military build-up around Ukraine, officials said on Friday.

Denmark's decision to send the jets "comes at just the right time", Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda said at a ceremony at the Baltic state's northern air base in Siauliai.

The fighter planes will patrol Lithuanian air space until April 1 along with four Polish fighters that have been stationed there since December 1. Several exercises are planned.

The Baltic states feel threatened amid the current tensions between Russia and the West, with Moscow demanding NATO scrap its "enhanced forward presence" in the Baltics and Poland.

"This is an extremely worrying time not just for Lithuania but for all the NATO allies," Nauseda said.

Lithuania is particularly concerned by Russian troop movements in neighbouring Belarus.

The forces there "are many more than during the Zapad military exercises" between Russia and Belarus last year, Lithuanian Defence Minister Arvydas Anusauskas said.

Denmark announced earlier this month that it would deploy a frigate with 160 crew to reinforce NATO patrols in the Baltic Sea.

Six US fighter jets also landed in Estonia this week to boost the NATO mission there.

NATO's deployment in Baltics, Poland contested by Russia
Warsaw (AFP) Jan 28, 2022 - NATO's commitments on its strategically sensitive eastern flank in Poland and the Baltic states are one of the main bones of contention between Russia and the West.

With the West forced to contend with the looming threat of a Russian invasion of Ukraine, Moscow is asking that NATO rethink its deployment in the region.

As tensions rise, the countries concerned -- all of which were once under the Soviet yoke and border Russia -- are instead asking for a greater NATO presence.

Here are some facts and figures on the "enhanced forward presence" (EFP) deployment in Poland and the Baltic nations of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania:

- Biggest reinforcement -

In 2017, NATO deployed four multinational battalions on a rotational basis to Poland and the Baltic states to guard against any possible Russian adventurism.

It was the biggest reinforcement of its collective defences since the Cold War.

Polish President Andrzej Duda hailed the launch of his country's battalion as an "historic moment" at the time.

Poland has been a NATO member since 1999 while the Baltic trio -- with a combined population of just six million people -- joined in 2004.

- Crimea -

NATO decided to send the military units to its eastern flank after Moscow annexed Crimea and helped separatists take over parts of eastern Ukraine in 2014.

The four countries, dominated by the Soviet Union for more than 40 years after World War II, had lobbied hard for the NATO deployments as an extra security buffer.

- Achilles' heel -

Poland has said the battle groups are notably necessary to help defend the "Suwalki Gap", a land corridor on the Polish-Lithuanian border that is sandwiched between Russia's heavily militarised Kaliningrad exclave and Belarus.

Military strategists warn it is the Achilles' heel of NATO's eastern flank: its capture would amputate the alliance's three Baltic members and so shatter its credibility.

- Troops -

The four NATO battalions based in Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Poland are led by Britain, Germany, Canada and the United States, respectively, with contributions from some 15 other member nations.

Each battlegroup comprises around 1,200 soldiers, though the numbers vary depending on the country and regularly change in accordance to deployment procedures.

The troops train constantly to improve coordination and conduct joint exercises.

Last year, Germany recalled an entire platoon of 30 soldiers stationed in Lithuania after its members were accused of racist and anti-Semitic behaviour.

- More please -

Faced with the latest threat from Moscow in the region, Poland and the Baltics have called for more support.

At a meeting with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg in November, Poland's Duda urged the alliance to send reinforcements to its eastern flank.

Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas meanwhile called for a greater US presence in the Baltic states earlier this month.

There have even been calls for a permanent US presence. Polish officials have long raised the prospect, and previously pitched the idea of building a "Fort Trump" to house US soldiers.

NATO however promised Russia in 1997 not to set up permanent bases in the former eastern bloc.

- Russian demands -

Amid the current standoff over Ukraine, Moscow put forward demands last month for wide-ranging security guarantees from the West.

Those include the request that Ukraine never be allowed to join NATO, but also sticking points that directly affect countries like the Baltics and Poland.

In the draft document, Russia insisted that other alliance members "shall not deploy military forces and weaponry" in Poland and the Baltic states.

Russia said such deployments could be allowed "in exceptional cases to eliminate a threat to security" but only with Moscow's consent.


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Liquid hydrogen (LH2) combustion aircraft could provide carbon-free air travel on 31%-38% of passenger kilometers flown in 2050, a new study from the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT) says. The study examines the performance and CO2 mitigation potential of liquid hydrogen-combustion aircraft that could enter service in 2035. It concludes that aircraft burning "green hydrogen" produced from renewable energy could enable flights up to 3400 km at reduced fuel costs compared to sust ... read more

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