|
12 December 2010 By Rick Rozoff Immediately on the heels of reports in the Guardian
and other Western news media that the U.S.-led North
Atlantic Treaty Organization has crafted a strategy to
intervene with nine army divisions in the Baltic Sea
area, President Barack Obama met with his Polish
counterpart Bronislaw Komorowski at the White House
and confirmed plans to increase U.S. military hardware
and troops in the latter's country. The two heads of state agreed on expanding
bilateral military relations "in the spirit of the
2008 U.S.-Polish Declaration on Strategic
Cooperation," [1] including the stationing of 16 U.S.
F-16 jet fighters and four C-130 Hercules military
transport planes on Polish air bases beginning in
2013. The U.S. sold Poland 48 of the multirole warplanes
earlier in the decade, delivering them between
2006-2008, and last month provided the third of five
Hercules aircraft to the Polish military. According to
a news agency report on the most recent delivery: "The
C-130 aircraft are Poland's biggest transport planes.
Polish crews used the planes to fly to Spain, Georgia,
Iraq and Afghanistan." [2] The American F-16s and C-130s will be based in
Poland to join those sold to the nation and the U.S.
fighters will participate in joint air combat
exercises with their Polish opposite numbers. U.S. F-15 jet fighters are currently completing a
four-month rotation at the Lithuanian Air Force base
at Siauliai for NATO's Baltic Air Policing mission.
The F-15 Eagle is "a twin-engine, all-weather tactical
fighter designed to gain and maintain air superiority
in aerial combat. It is considered among the most
successful modern fighters with over 100 aerial combat
victories with no losses in dogfights." [3] In addition to the American and Polish presidents
confirming the above deployments, coming as they do
after the stationing of U.S. Patriot Advanced
Capability-3 anti-ballistic missiles and 100 troops to
Morag, Poland – half an hour's drive from the Russian
border – in May of this year, Obama also confirmed an
even more menacing development: The Pentagon will
forge ahead with basing Standard Missile-3 (SM-3s)
interceptors in Poland, part of what the
administration refers to as the Aegis Ashore program
to adapt ship-based SM-3s for use on land. However,
Washington will almost certainly add SM-3-equipped
Aegis class warships to the mix with a continuous
rotation in the Baltic Sea. Obama "confirmed the commitment of the United
States to implement the Phased Adaptive Approach to
European missile defense, including basing land-based
SM-3 interceptors in Poland as part of this program in
the 2018 time frame, and expressed his gratitude for
the commitment by the government of Poland to host
this system." [4] The White House also committed to assigning
American 800 troops to Polish command in Afghanistan's
Ghazni province and supplying 20 mine-resistant
armored vehicles to Polish forces serving with NATO's
International Security Assistance Force. The following day President Komorowski met with
former U.S. national security advisor Zbigniew
Brzezinski and laid a wreath at the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in
Arlington, Virginia. The SM-3 has a standard range of 300 miles (500
kilometers), but the SM-3 Block II variant is enhanced
for extended range and velocity. On September 17, 2009
Obama and Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced
plans to abandon the George W. Bush administration
project to base ten ground-based midcourse interceptor
missiles of the sort based in Alaska and California in
silos in Redzikowo, Poland in favor of a "smarter,
stronger and swifter" deployment of a graduated,
layered interceptor missile system in Eastern Europe
from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea. Seven months ago the first phase – the installation
of a U.S. advanced Patriot missile battery – was
effected in eastern Poland. Much as with the earlier, now discarded,
ground-based midcourse missile plan, Washington and
its NATO allies claim that PAC-3 and SM-3 deployments
are in response to non-existent or at any rate
far-fetched threats of long-range missile attacks by
so-called rogue states: Iran, Syria and North Korea.
Thirty countries in total according to NATO Secretary
General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who adamantly refuses
to list the putative villains. Iran does not possess, is not in the process of
acquiring and is not capable of developing
intercontinental ballistic missiles able to be
launched over the Arctic Ocean to the U.S., so SM-3s
in Poland with a current range of 300 miles cannot
"protect" North America and Europe from an alleged
Iranian missile threat. The distance between the
capitals of Iran and Poland is almost 2,500 miles, so
any intercept of an Iranian missile by an American
SM-3 would have to occur over Ukraine. (And possibly
Belarus. If the range of SM-3s in Poland were to be
extended, and with the same interceptors in Romania,
the countries of the South Caucasus and Russia's North
Caucasus could suffer fallout even if in theory debris
is to be burned during reentry.) SM-3 and Patriot anti-ballistic missiles are what
the Pentagon and its Missile Defense Agency refer to
as kinetic – "hit-to-kill" – weapons that officially
are not equipped with an explosive warhead and that
destroy an incoming missile on contact. The USS Lake
Erie guided missile cruiser launched an SM-3 into the
exoatmosphere over the Pacific Ocean on February 21,
2008 to destroy an American satellite with a kinetic
warhead. However, as Washington acknowledges that North
Korea has nuclear weapons and accuses Iran of pursuing
them, a missile collision involving a nuclear warhead
over the territory of a third nation is an inevitable
danger entailed by U.S. and NATO missile shield
deployments. The U.S. cannot pretend that Patriot Advanced
Capability-3 missiles in Poland are in any manner
aimed toward and at any nation other than Russia. The
American missiles and troops in the Baltic Sea city of
Morag are near the border of Russia's Kaliningrad
district where the Interfax news agency revealed on
December 7 that, in addition to NATO recently
elaborating plans to intervene against Russia on
behalf of Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, the
military bloc's "plans to surround and crush Russia's
military forces in the Kaliningrad region (the
country's westernmost region) were drawn up at least
five years ago." [5] A recent analysis in the Russian press disclosed
that this May's missile deployment in Poland has been
followed by the decision at the NATO summit in Lisbon
to consolidate an interceptor missile system for all
of Europe under control of NATO nominally but the U.S.
practically: "The Patriots being integrated into the
US missile shield, the issue clearly acquires a
strategic dimension." [6] Earlier this week Polish Defense Minister Bogdan
Klich stated, "The American presence on our territory
constitutes an additional guarantee, an additional
assurance that we are in an alliance where our allies
would come to our aid if the situation warranted." He
also confirmed that "in 2013 Poland and the three
Baltic states would host, in an exercise of the NATO
Response Force (NRF), a multinational contingent of
about 25,000 troops available for rapid deployment in
crisis management, stabilization or collective
defense." [7] Weeks before Klich asserted that "Poland accepts
the U.S. proposal of hosting rotating F-16 and
Hercules aircraft and their crews" and disclosed
"plans for joint drills with the U.S." [8] The U.S. government characterized the
Obama-Komorowski meeting on December 8 as being
conducted within the framework of the U.S.-Polish
Declaration on Strategic Cooperation, as seen above. The text of the declaration includes these
provisions: "We believe that the development of durable and
long-term strategic cooperation will increase the
security of the United States and Poland, as well as
the security of the North Atlantic area. The
cornerstone of the U.S.-Poland security relationship
is the solidarity embodied in Article 5 of the North
Atlantic Treaty, which provides that an armed attack
against one NATO country shall be considered an armed
attack against them all. The United States and Poland
recognize the importance of enhancing their individual
and collective national security by working within the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)…." "Within the context of, and consistent with, both
the North Atlantic Treaty and the U.S.-Poland
strategic partnership, the United States is committed
to the security of Poland and of any U.S. facilities
located on the territory of the Republic of Poland.
The United States and Poland will work together to
counter emerging military or non-military threats
posed by third parties or to minimize the effects of
such threats. The increased strategic cooperation
described herein would enhance the security of the
United States and Poland." "Missile defenses, including an interceptor base in
Poland, provide a necessary and critical capability
that can be used to defend both nations, and other
NATO Allies, from long-range missile threats, thus
enhancing the security of the United States, Poland,
and the North Atlantic area." "Cooperation on missile defense strengthens the
strategic partnership between the United States and
Poland." "The United States and Poland plan to conclude a
number of bilateral agreements that are intended to
enhance defense and security cooperation between the
United States and Poland." "In pursuit of this shared vision of broader and
deeper U.S.-Poland strategic cooperation, the United
States and Poland decided that the Strategic
Cooperation Consultative Group (SCCG) will serve as
the primary mechanism for furthering the U.S.-Poland
strategic relationship. The SCCG will be composed of
senior representatives from the Department of State
and Department of Defense in the United States, and
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of
National Defense in Poland. The SCCG will meet
regularly or upon the request of the United States or
Poland and may establish working groups such as the
High-Level Defense Group (HLDG). The SCCG complements
the work being done in other areas, including the
existing U.S.-Poland Strategic Dialogue and Joint
Staff Talks." Washington also pledged to "assist Poland in
transforming and modernizing its Armed Forces,"
"provide defense equipment and related materials…with
the purpose of improving the interoperability,
sustainability, and deployability of Poland's Armed
Forces," and "expand air and missile defense
cooperation." [9] A recent news story on the website of U.S. Air
Forces in Europe reported on a joint exercise with
forces from the U.S., Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and
Poland for "the coordination and training of [Joint
Terminal Air Controllers] and Polish F-16 close air
support missions during Operation Sabre Strike 11 at
Adazi Training Aria, Latvia." The purpose of the exercise was to "continue mutual
support for the fight in Afghanistan and demonstrate
previous successful NATO coordination in Operation
Iraqi Freedom. "The [U.S.] 100th ARW [Air Refueling Wing] provided
fuel to the Polish F-16s, which allowed the fighters
to conduct bomb and strafing runs as coordinated by
the NATO JTAC trainees and instructors. This marked
the first time that live munitions were dropped in
Latvia since their separation from Russia in 1992."
[10] On December 7 Poland, Lithuania and Ukraine signed
an agreement on the formation of a trilateral
Lithuanian-Polish-Ukrainian Brigade, LITPOLUKRBRIG.
The unit is being created "for deployment to
operations of international organisations." [11] That
is, NATO and the European Union. Two days later Secretary General Rasmussen met with
Estonian President Toomas Hendrik Ilves at NATO
Headquarters in Brussels "to discuss the way forward
on the results of the successful Lisbon Summit last
November." Rasmussen applauded the troop contribution of
diminutive Estonia (with a population of 1.3 million)
for NATO's war in Afghanistan. The NATO chief and
Estonian president "welcomed the fact that the New
Strategic Concept reinforces NATO's commitment to
collective defence as a core task for the Alliance.
The Secretary General reiterated that NATO's ongoing
air policing mission for the Baltic states is a
visible proof of Allied commitment to collective
defence." Rasmussen added, "The NATO Cyber Security Centre of
Excellence in Estonia will play a key role in building
up our collective defences on this 21st century
battle-front." [12] As for a closer relationship between NATO and
Russia as indicated by the NATO-Russia Council meeting
during the second day of the NATO summit in Portugal
last month, what the government-owned Voice of Russia
cited President Dmitry Medvedev describing as a
"kindhearted partnership" in which "Russia sees NATO
as a partner, rather than a threat" [13], a German
news source reported: "Experts believe that, even if Russia is left out
and reacts belligerently, the missile shield will
still go ahead with European powerhouses like Germany
pushing the US and NATO to commit to securing the
continent from external threats." [14] Employing NATO as mechanism and intermediary as
needed, Washington is establishing a growing and
permanent military presence in Poland that has far
less to do with protecting the nation from imaginary
Russian threats than with defying Russia on its own
doorstep and laying the groundwork for confrontation
between the world's two main nuclear powers. 1) Xinhua News Agency, December 9, 2010 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McDonnell_Douglas_F-15_Eagle 4) America.gov, December 8, 2010 http://www.america.gov/st/peacesec-english/2010/December/20101208154122elrem4.792422e-02.html 5) Interfax/RT, December 7, 2010 http://en.rian.ru/international_affairs/20101208/161688295.html 7) Agence France-Presse, December 9, 2010 http://www.america.gov/st/texttrans-english/2008/August/20080820150705xjsnommis0.831753.html 10) U.S. Air Forces in Europe, December 9, 2010 |