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Estonia shows off NATO ties at celebrations on Russian border
by Staff Writers
Narva, Estonia (AFP) Feb 24, 2015


Britain to send military trainers to Ukraine: PM
London (AFP) Feb 24, 2015 - Britain will send troops to Ukraine next month to train government forces fighting pro-Russian separatists, Prime Minister David Cameron announced Tuesday, while ruling out sending lethal equipment.

"Over the course of the next month we are going to be deploying British service personnel to provide advice and a range of training, from tactical intelligence to logistics to medical care, which is something else they have asked for," Cameron told a parliamentary committee.

"And we'll be developing an infantry training programme with Ukraine to improve the durability of their forces. This will involve a number of British service personnel.

"They will be away from the area of conflict, but I think this is the sort of thing we should be helping with."

Up to 75 military personnel will be deployed as part of an operation lasting up to six months, the defence ministry confirmed separately.

The prime minister repeated that Britain would not supply lethal equipment to Ukrainian government forces.

"The reason for not going further is we don't believe fundamentally there is some military solution to this issue," Cameron said.

"There needs to be a diplomatic solution which I think should be enabled by sanctions and pressure and the economic weight of Europe and America."

Foreign ministers from Ukraine, Russia, Germany and France called Tuesday for a total ceasefire in eastern Ukraine at a meeting in Paris, as Kiev accused Moscow and pro-Russian rebels on the ground of torpedoing a nine-day-old truce.

Cameron dismissed suggestions that the absence of Britain from the international negotiations meant it was losing its influence on the global stage.

"We shouldn't be too precious about not being involved in every different set of negotiations," he said.

"There is no point endlessly obsessing about whether or not you are in the room. We have a very clear role when it comes to Ukraine."

Estonia marked its independence day Tuesday with a military parade featuring NATO hardware and troops on its eastern border with Russia amid heightened east-west tensions over Ukraine.

Around 100 British, Dutch, Spanish, Latvian and Lithuanian troops marched in the snow alongside some 1,300 Estonian soldiers to mark the independence of the formerly Soviet-ruled republic, now a member of the European Union and NATO.

"History has taught us that if we do not defend ourselves, nobody else will," General Riho Teras, Estonia's chief of staff, said at the parade.

"The events in Ukraine that have kept the entire world awake, demonstrate very clearly that we ourselves must maintain security," he added.

Two US Stryker armoured personnel carriers and a number of Dutch CV90 tanks were also on parade, equipment NATO has brought into the Baltics for a wave of exercises on the heels of Russia's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimean peninsula and subsequent meddling in that country's east.

The annual parade has taken on particular importance this year in the context of jitters in the Baltic countries.

Holding the parade in Narva on the Russian border, where a majority of residents are ethnic Russian, was seen by commentators as sending a strong signal to Moscow about NATO's committment to collective defence.

General Adrian Bradshaw, NATO's Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe, said last week that Russia could try to seize territory from the alliance's states off the back of fighting in Ukraine.

British Defence Secretary Michael Fallon reportedly also told journalists last week that there was a "real and present danger" to Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia.

However, few ethnic-Russian Narva locals who came to the parade seemed to echo fears of a Russian intervention.

"In my opinion national security is blown up by the press, it's nothing serious, everything is okay, no one is going to attack anyone," said 55-year-old Yuri Melnikov.

Elvira Neimann, 77, said she's been living in Narva since the end of the Second World War in 1945: "I feel part of Estonia, not Russia."

"We're all tolerant people, Russia is our friendly neighbour," she told AFP.

Lithuania said Tuesday it would return to limited conscription later this year as concern mounts over Russian military exercises near NATO Baltic states.

The Soviet Union annexed the three small states during World War II. They won independence in 1991 and have had rocky ties with Moscow ever since.

slg-via-amj-mas/ccr


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