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Russian bombers spark NATO scramble, protest in Baltic
by Staff Writers
Vilnius (AFP) March 24, 2015


UK 'military lobby' behind Falklands beef-up: Argentina
Buenos Aires (AFP) March 24, 2015 - Argentina said Tuesday that Britain's plan to beef up its defenses in the Falkland Islands was a wasteful initiative pushed through by the military lobby.

"It's an excuse used by the military to lobby to keep spending money," said the Argentine ambassador to Britain, Alicia Castro.

Her comment came after British Defense Secretary Michael Fallon announced a �180-million ($268-million), 10-year program to counter "continuous intimidation" from Argentina over the disputed South Atlantic islands.

The money will be used for an upgraded surface-to-air missile system and two Chinook helicopters for the islands.

Argentina invaded the Falklands, which it calls the Malvinas, in 1982, sparking a bloody war that it lost in just over two months.

The invasion initially rallied nationalistic support for Argentina's military government at home, but the defeat was devastating for the army's image and helped bring about the end of the dictatorship the following year.

Castro said today's democratic Argentina "poses no threat" to the islands.

"There will never be another war in the Malvinas because that was clearly launched by the military dictatorship with the objective of keeping itself in power," she told Argentine broadcaster Radio del Plata.

She said what the British government should really be concerned about was its use of taxpayers' money.

"More and more, English society is questioning what it sees as useless, this outsize military spending in the middle of an economic crisis to keep a military base with 2,000 men in some remote islands to prevent an invasion that will never happen," she said.

The Falklands War cost the lives of 649 Argentine soldiers, 255 Britons and three islanders.

Bilateral relations have been tense ever since. Argentina wants bilateral talks on the area's sovereignty, but Britain maintains there is nothing to discuss.

Tensions have intensified in recent years after the discovery of significant offshore oil deposits close to the islands.

NATO jets were scrambled Tuesday to escort Russian fighters and nuclear-capable bombers flying near the Baltic states and Sweden with their transponders switched off, sparking protests over the danger they posed to civil aviation.

Lithuania's defence ministry spokeswoman Asta Galdikaite said NATO air policing aircraft identified two Tu-22 type bombers and two SU-27 jets. The Swedish military also confirmed the aircraft showed up on their ground radar.

"The flights conducted with switched-off on-board transponders are among other things a risk to civil aviation as such flights are not visible on civil air traffic control radars," she told AFP.

"We are tired of having to repeatedly protest against these violations," Foreign Minister Margot Wallstroem told the Swedish TT news agency on Tuesday.

"We need to obtain Russia's respect for existing regulations and put an end to this, which has been incredibly challenging and even dangerous for civil aviation as well," she added.

In December a Russian military plane came dangerously close to a passenger plane from Cimber Air, of the SAS group, which had taken off from Copenhagen headed for Poznan in Poland, according to the Swedish military.

On Tuesday, the aircraft flew from mainland Russia to Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave on the Baltic Sea, sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania. Both are EU and NATO members, while Sweden is not.

Galdikaite said Lithuania had seen "an increase in the activity of military aircraft of the Russian Federation over the Baltic Sea this year", adding it was the first time since December that Russian bombers were spotted in the area.

Russia's seizure of Crimea, support for separatists in eastern Ukraine and stepped-up military drills have caused unease in the Baltic states and Poland, which lay behind the Iron Curtain a quarter of a century ago.

Lithuania's President Dalia Grybauskaite said last week that Russia sent nuclear-capable Iskander missiles to Kaliningrad, which could "reach even Berlin" .

US forces deployed a battery of Patriot surface-to-air missiles near the Polish capital Warsaw this weekend as part of ongoing drills.

NATO is also countering Moscow's moves by deploying more aircraft, ships and personnel for exercises on its eastern flank.

The 28-member alliance already runs an air policing mission in formerly Soviet-ruled Baltic states bordering Russia.

NATO has created a spearhead force of 5,000 troops capable of rapid deployment and will establish command centres in the Baltic states, Bulgaria, Poland and Romania by 2016.

US troops on exercises in eastern Europe are, meanwhile, keeping a high public profile.

Infantry soldiers in a convoy of Stryker armoured personnel carriers returning to Germany from exercises in the Baltic states via Poland and the Czech Republic are meeting and greeting civilians on their 1,800 kilometre (1,120 miles) journey dubbed the "Dragoon ride".


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