Iohannis Senzaţional !

Varşovia, 9 iulie 2016 – Iohannis la NATO: O realizare senzationala! Am ajuns noi, lucru de neimaginat acum putini ani, sa comandam forte aliate.

Afganistan, 21 decembrie 2009Soldati americani, condusi de romani in Afganistan

 

 

 

 

Keep calm and NATO

Sa nu ne agitam ca a venit acum Romania cu nu stiu ce noua initiativa de brigada multi-nationala NATO la noi. Este vorba de decizia din 2015 de constituire a comandamentului NATO si a structurii de forte pentru divizia multinationala din sud-estul Europei in subordinea caruia vor fi Divizia Getica, bulgarii, etc.
Secretarul General NATO a mentionat ca detaliile vor veni mai tarziu, pentru ca pe calendar vom atinge capacitatea operationala initiala in toamna lui 2016 iar cea completa in 2018.
Deci nu este o ofertă de nou angajament la NATO cu forte nationale din partea Romaniei altele decat cele stabilite in 2015. Nu venim cu ceva nou.

Vedeţi mai jos ştirea din 2015.

Generalul Ovidiu-Liviu Uifăleanu, numit comandantul Diviziei Multinaționale de Sud-Est a NATO

 

 

Estul trebuie să mai aştepte

US and Germany say No to Poland on Nato base by Andrew Rettman

The US and Germany have unequivocally said that Nato will not build new bases in Poland, citing tactical and political reasons.

“Nato’s not talking about establishing bases … we support an enhanced presence, but we can do it without bases, bases, bases,” James Townsend, a senior Pentagon official, said in Bratislava on Friday (15 April).

His comment came at the Globsec conference in the Slovak capital after Poland’s foreign minister, Witold Waszczykowski, said he wanted “presence, presence, presence and once again presence” of Nato troops to act as a “symbol of readiness to defend the eastern flank.”

 

Un start modest

Daca, aşa cum propune autorul, NATO va combate amenintarile hibride cu o întoarcere la un fel de peace enforcement dintr-un concept de peacekeeping de generatia a 3-a când de fapt noi avem nevoie de apărare teritorială si descurajare, atunci înseamnă că facem paşi în spate.

Back to Basics on Hybrid Warfare in Europe: A Lesson from the Balkans

By Christopher J. Lamb and Susan Stipanovich

The complex mix of aggressive behaviors Russia used in Georgia and Ukraine is commonly referred to as hybrid warfare, defined by one scholar as “a tailored mix of conventional weapons, irregular tactics, terrorism, and criminal behavior in the same time and battle space to obtain political objectives.”1 North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) leaders fear Russia will use hybrid warfare to destabilize or occupy parts of Poland, the Baltic states, or other countries. They are trying to devise more effective responses to counter such a possibility. Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg asserts that NATO must adapt to meet the hybrid warfare threat.2 Speaking at the same event, U.S. Secretary of Defense Ash Carter agreed and suggested “part of the answer” was “increased readiness, special operation forces, and more intelligence.”3 Several months earlier, Carter’s deputy, Robert Work, declared the United States also needed “new operational concepts” to confront hybrid warfare.4 Meanwhile some NATO countries are establishing special units to counter hybrid warfare tactics,5 and the U.S. Congress has required the Pentagon to come up with a strategy to counter hybrid warfare.6