FPF-fwd.:
U.S. Lays Groundwork in Eastern Europe
USA Today | July 18, 2005 - CONSTANTA, Romania - The U.S. Army is conducting
joint military exercises this month in Bulgaria and Romania as a key test of
Pentagon plans to develop Eastern European bases as staging areas for fighting
in the Middle East.
Beginning Tuesday, 1,500 U.S. troops, some of them bound for Iraq, will join
400 Romanian soldiers in urban warfare training. The port and military air
base at Constanta on the Black Sea also are part of the exercise, just as they
are expected to play a role in future U.S. deployments.
In neighboring Bulgaria to the south, 700 U.S. and Bulgarian troops are
conducting armored warfare training.
Both nations, once part of the Soviet Union's bloc of Cold War military allies
and now recent additions to the NATO alliance, are negotiating with the
Pentagon over permanent U.S. basing rights, said Romania's president and
Bulgaria's ambassador to the United States.
Marine Gen. James Jones, the U.S. military commander in Europe, called the
joint exercises and potential bases part of an "eastward shift in the center
of gravity" for U.S. military policy. They're part of Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld's plan to shift troops closer to potential trouble spots in
the Middle East, Central Asia and Africa.
"The exercise allows us to hone our skills to build expeditionary base camps,"
said Army Maj. Jon Chytka, who is running the exercises in Romania. "We're not
authorized to build permanent facilities here."
That will probably come later once the Pentagon finishes its negotiations with
Romania and Bulgaria.
Bulgaria and Romania have 450 and 860 troops, respectively, in Iraq. U.S.
troops stopped at Constanta's air base and port before the invasion of Iraq in
March 2003.
Though the Pentagon plans to keep thousands of troops in Germany, it will move
roughly a third of the 75,000 troops there to bases in the USA.
It plans to establish smaller bases in Eastern Europe, where rotating groups
of 3,000 U.S. troops would stop en route to more distant deployments.
U.S. troops based in Germany live there permanently with their families. Those
deployed to Bulgaria and Romania would be there temporarily, and their
families would remain in the USA.
Along with the facilities in Constanta, the United States is negotiating to
use the military training range around Babadag, according to Romanian
President Traian Basescu.
In neighboring Bulgaria, the Pentagon is sizing up a training area near the
city of Sliven; Bezmer Air Base; and a naval base at the Black Sea port of
Burgas, said Bulgarian Ambassador to the United States Elena Poptodorova. All
are being used this month in the U.S.-Bulgarian joint military exercise.
"The discussion on this American presence is not about massive, Cold War-style
bases but about a smaller-size presence, which should meet the goals of
flexibility and rapid reaction against the current threats ... such as
international terrorism," Basescu said in an e-mailed response to questions
from USA TODAY.
The military exercises are a test of that flexibility, said Peter Majeranowski,
an official of Windmill International, the contractor handling most of the
logistic work on the Romanian project.
In six weeks, the Army, Windmill and Romanian and Turkish contractors have
turned an empty field near the town of Babadag into a functioning base for
2,000 with water and sewer lines, electricity, collapsible living quarters and
mess halls, communication gear and mock urban areas for training.
Pentagon planners like the locations of Bulgaria and Romania, and they also
appreciate the nations' support of U.S. military operations, Jones told the
House Armed Services Committee.
Germany, a longtime U.S. ally, opposed the war in Iraq and didn't send troops
to fight there. Saudi Arabia, which hosted U.S. troops during the Persian Gulf
War in 1991, wouldn't allow U.S. forces there for the Iraq war. Turkey, which
borders Iraq, wouldn't agree to let the United States open a northern front in
the invasion of Iraq.
Germany and Turkey are longtime members of NATO.
Those nations' opposition to U.S. policy is one reason Rumsfeld wants to move
troops elsewhere, Jones said. The enthusiasm of Romania and Bulgaria toward
their post-Cold War alliance with the United States indicates they would be
more willing hosts.
"That doesn't mean we don't have different opinions. ... We do," Poptodorova,
the Bulgarian ambassador to Washington, said in a telephone interview. "But
the important thing is that the strategic choices have been made."
Basescu said the exercises will help improve Romania's military by giving it
the chance to work more closely with U.S. troops.
The establishment of U.S. bases also would show the world the nations are a
safe place for business, said Timothy Kane of the Heritage Foundation, a
conservative think tank in Washington. [enditem]
(FPF: like Iraq and Afghanistan? - HR)
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*'The war in Iraq is illegal' says United Nation's Secretary General Kofi
Annan - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/5pl2v
* Torture Court case against Rumsfeld moves on - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/clpbf
* Impeachbush.org is mobilizing a massive impeachment contingent at the huge
September 24, 2005 anti-war March on Washington. Assemble at 12 noon at the
White House. Sign up here to learn about the plans of the impeachment movement
in the next month - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/cex28
*Help the troops come home! Url.:
http://www.bringemhome.org - We need them badly to fight our so called
'governments' - Url.:
http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/
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