US Troops to Stay Longer in Lithuania, Defense Minister Says

US Troops to Stay Longer in Lithuania, Defense Minister Says
Lithuanian Minister of Defense Raimundas Karoblis attends a ceremony to welcome the German battalion being deployed to Lithuania in Rukla, Lithuania, on Feb. 7, 2017. (Ints Kalnins/Reuters)
Reuters
9/22/2020
Updated:
9/22/2020

PABRADE, Lithuania—A new contingent of U.S. troops and armor will be deployed in Lithuania in November but their presence is not linked to the situation in neighboring Belarus, Lithuania’s defense minister said on Tuesday.

Belarus has undergone six weeks of protests since a contested Aug. 9 election which President Alexander Lukashenko said he won.

Since then, Lukashenko has accused NATO of a buildup near its borders, begun military drills near the borders with Lithuania and Poland, and put half his army on the highest state of readiness.

More than 500 U.S. soldiers, about 25 Abrams tanks and about 30 Bradley armored transports will replace a contingent that arrived in Lithuania on Sept. 4 for a two-month stay near the Belarus border. The new force will stay until mid-June 2021.

Defense Minister Raimondas Karoblis said the U.S. military arrivals in Lithuania were not connected to the situation in Belarus.

Belarus military activity near the border has reduced this month compared to maneuvers in August, Karoblis said.

“The U.S. presence makes us calmer, it’s a powerful deterrent, but it’s not connected specifically to the situation in Belarus, rather to the geopolitical situation after Russia began its aggression in Ukraine and Georgia,” Karoblis told reporters at the Pabrade Military Training Grounds.

Russia, which sees Belarus as a buffer state against the EU and NATO, supported Lukashenko and has accused the United States of fomenting revolution in its neighbor.

The U.S. ambassador to Lithuania, Robert Gilchrist, also said there was no connection between the troop presence and Belarus.

“It’s about readiness, it’s about working with our allies. There’s no link (to Belarus),” he said.

By Andrius Sytas