The Baltic is not NATO's "lake" This is especially important in ... but in the best-case scenario, the situation will not begin to change until the end of the decade.
And our adversaries should know this," NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said this month in announcing a new alliance mission, dubbed "Baltic Sentry," to protect the underwater infrastructure ...
Russia has pledged to take all necessary actions to safeguard its interests in the Baltic Sea in response to increased <a ...
The Baltic Sea has clearly not become a NATO lake. The most recent incident of cable damage has highlighted, once again, the vulnerability of undersea energy and communications infrastructure — ...
The alliance's Secretary-General Mark Rutte announced the deployment of roughly 10 ships to monitor the waters known as NATO Lake. The mission, dubbed Baltic Sentry, will see these ships monitor ...
The Baltic Sea is largely bracketed by NATO member states, and is sometimes referred to as a "NATO lake," but Russia has a significant footprint in the Baltic from its Kaliningrad exclave.
The Baltic is not NATO's "lake" This is important ... but in the best-case scenario, the situation will not begin to change until the end of the decade.
Even before ships began damaging cables in the Baltic region, the strategic sea -- referred to by some allied leaders as the "NATO lake" after the accession of Sweden and Finland to the alliance ...
Baltic Sentry will be led by the Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum (JFCBS), with Allied Maritime Command (MARCOM) also playing a central role in coordinating action related to subsea ...
NATO has decided to strengthen its military presence in the Baltic Sea to protect infrastructure in the region following recent damage to undersea cables between Estonia and Finland. "In order to ...
Security and Democracy and Nato's Secretary General Mark Rutte in the beginning of the aummit of the Baltic Sea NATO countries at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki. The topic of the summit is ...