NATO
begins US-led Baltic Sea naval exercises with Finland, Sweden
By
JARI TANNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS • June
5, 2022
Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson meet in Stockholm, Saturday, June 4, 2022. (Fredrik Persson/TT News Agency via AP) (Fredrik Persson/TT)
HELSINKI — NATO kicked off a nearly two-week
U.S.-led naval exercise on the Baltic Sea on Sunday with more than 7,000
sailors, airmen and marines from 16 nations, including two aspiring to join the
military alliance, Finland and Sweden.
The annual BALTOPS naval exercise, initiated in
1972, is not held in response to any specific threat. But the military alliance
said that "with both Sweden and Finland participating, NATO is seizing the
chance in an unpredictable world to enhance its joint force resilience and
strength" together with two Nordic aspirant nations.
Finland and Sweden both have a long history of
military non-alignment before their governments decided to apply to join NATO
in May, a direct result of Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine. Over the past
years, Moscow has repeatedly warned Helsinki and Stockholm against joining the
Western military alliance and warned of retaliatory measures if they did.
Ahead of the naval drill, which involved 45
vessels and 75 aircraft, the top U.S military official said in Sweden — the
host of the BALTOPS 22 exercise — that it was particularly important for NATO
to show support to the governments in Helsinki and Stockholm.
"It is important for us, the United States,
and the other NATO countries to show solidarity with both Finland and Sweden in
this exercise," U.S. Gen. Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, said Saturday during a news conference aboard the large amphibious
warship USS Kearsarge, which was moored in central Stockholm.
Milley, speaking with the Swedish Prime Minister
Magdalena Andersson, stressed that the Baltic Sea is a strategically important
body of water — "one of the great seaways of the world."
He said from Moscow's perspective, Finland and
Sweden joining NATO will be "very problematic" and leave Russia in a
difficult military position as the Baltic Sea's coastline would be almost
completely encircled by NATO members, except for Russia's Baltic exclave of
Kaliningrad and the Russian city of St. Petersburg and its surrounding areas.
Turkey, a NATO member that has had good relations
with Russia, has objected to Finland and Sweden joining the military alliance,
citing their alleged support for a Kurdish group that Turkey labels as
terrorist. NATO's chief has been trying to resolve the dispute.
The United States has never before moved such a
large warship as the 843-foot USS Kearsarge in the Swedish capital, where it
sailed through narrow passages in the Stockholm archipelago, Milley said.
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