US defense sites in Europe
should bolster protection against risk of Russian sabotage, agencies say
By
John Vandiver
Stars and Stripes • November
22, 2024
A camera-equipped drone hovers above a training
site at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center in Hohenfels, Germany, in
March 2024. U.S. authorities issued a joint statement Nov. 21, 2024, saying
American defense-related sites in Europe should bolster security to guard
against Russian sabotage. (Ayden Norcross/U.S. Army National Guard )
STUTTGART,
Germany — U.S. authorities say American defense industrial sites in Europe
should step up their security over concerns that Russian saboteurs could target
them.
The National
Counterintelligence and Security Center, the FBI and several Defense Department
agencies issued a joint statement Thursday saying the Kremlin has recruited
criminals and other proxies to conduct such operations.
“U.S.
companies, particularly those supporting entities involved in the Ukraine
conflict or other ongoing geopolitical conflicts, are encouraged to enhance
their vigilance and security efforts as a precaution,” the statement said.
The warning
comes after a series of suspected Russian sabotage actions this week that included
the severing of undersea communication cables running from Germany to Finland
and elsewhere.
Over the
past year, there have been indications of Russia getting more brazen in its
sabotage efforts in Europe. Numerous acts of arson and the attempted assassination
of a German defense industrial leader are among the operations that have been
carried out attempted, according to allies.
In July,
Russian sabotage also was suspected when a package caught fire at a DHL
logistics center before being loaded onto a cargo plane in the eastern German
city of Leipzig.
Package
fires occurred in the same month in Poland and Britain. The senders’ intent was
to do a test run on delivery channels for such packages, which were ultimately
destined for the U.S. or Canada, a Polish prosecutor told the BBC in November.
Gen. Darryl
Williams, the U.S. Army’s top commander in Europe, said
in October that the
situation is increasing the risks of a broader military escalation should
Russian agents take things too far.
“We could
tumble into this thing because of the people that are currently snooping around
Europe and causing mischief in all of our backyards,” Williams said during an
Army conference in Washington.
NATO
Secretary-General Mark Rutte said earlier this month that Russia is
intensifying its campaign of hybrid attacks across allied territories,
“sabotaging industry and committing violence.”
“This shows
that the shifting front line in this war is no longer solely within Ukraine,”
Rutte said during a news conference in Berlin. “Increasingly, the front line is
moving beyond borders — to the Baltic region, to Western Europe and even to the
High North.”
The United
States is involved in an array of military and defense industry efforts in
Europe. In Bavaria, for instance, American and European companies are
coordinating with NATO to produce 1,000 Patriot air defense missiles at a new
factory, according to NATO.
In June,
U.S. military bases were put on heightened alert in connection with potential
threats to installations across the Continent.
While the
Pentagon never specified the nature of the threat, CNN reported in July that
the move came in response to information that Russia-backed actors were
considering sabotage attacks against American military personnel and facilities.
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