US Marines lend littoral prowess to huge NATO
drill in Norway
By
JOHN VANDIVER
STARS AND STRIPES • March
6, 2024
U.S. Marines and their allies
conduct a breaching and clearing mission in Setermoen, Norway, Feb. 7, 2024, in
preparation for Nordic Response. (Christian Salazar/U.S. Marine Corps)
STUTTGART, Germany — U.S. Marines are bringing
their expertise in littoral operations to the High North, where thousands of
troops are practicing tactics that would come into play in a crisis, the
service’s top general in Europe said Wednesday.
The Marine Corps is leading Nordic Response, one of NATO’s
largest military drills this year. The two-week exercise, which
began Sunday, involves 20,000 troops fanned out across Norway, Sweden and
Finland.
The exercise will serve as a testing ground over
the next two weeks as U.S. and allied forces tinker with tactics so they can
fight seamlessly against a “capable opponent,” said Maj. Gen. Robert Sofge,
commander of the Stuttgart-based Marine Corps Forces Europe and Africa.
While Sofge did not single out Russia, Nordic
Response is organized around defending allies from a potential attack from the
east.
Various other exercises now unfolding in other
parts of Europe, collectively referred to as NATO’s Steadfast Defender series,
also are focused on countering Russia.
Maj. Gen. Robert Sofge, head of
Marine Forces Europe and Africa, right, talks with Swedish Col. Adam Camel
during an exercise in Sweden in 2023. The Marine Corps is leading Nordic
Response, one of NATO’s largest military drills this year. (Donato Maffin/U.S.
Marine Corps)
U.S. Marines have a long history of operating in
Norway and would be tasked with fighting alongside allies as a combined force
should northern Europe come under attack, Sofge said, adding that they “would
work hard in the littoral regions.”
Nordic Response involves 2,500 Marines and
brings together alliance warships and fighter planes.
The II Marine Expeditionary Force is serving as
the land component headquarters for Nordic Response, operating out of Bardufoss
Air Station in Norway.
In addition to ground troops, the Marines also
have dispatched fighter pilots, who will fly the fifth-generation F-35B
Lightning II and F/A-18 Hornets.
“Nordic Response stresses that now is the time to
get our systems connected ... to ensure we can sense and make sense in a
complex battlefield in the harshest of conditions against a capable opponent,”
Sofge said.
Nordic Response has a new twist this year. Finland
is taking part as a NATO member for the first time, having joined the alliance
last year in the wake of Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, which prompted a
reversal of decades of Finnish neutrality.
Sweden joined Finland’s accession bid but was
stonewalled for two years by Turkey and Hungary. It is likely to be officially
declared the alliance’s 32nd member during the exercise. Sweden’s flag could be
raised at NATO headquarters in Brussels any day now, symbolizing the country’s
standing.
The additions will give NATO two experienced
militaries that are well-trained for operating in harsh Arctic conditions,
Sofge said.
“NATO was strong before and it’s stronger now,” he
said. “It’s better. ... That’s what I think has practically changed.”
John covers U.S. military activities across Europe and Africa. Based in
Stuttgart, Germany, he previously worked for newspapers in New Jersey, North
Carolina and Maryland. He is a graduate of the University of Delaware.
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