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UK to step up military presence in Arctic
by AFP Staff Writers
Oslo (AFP) March 29, 2022

Britain is to reinforce its military presence in the Arctic in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said Tuesday.

The region "is important for our communications, it is important for our trade and our travels, it is important for our freedoms," said Wallace as he visited troops at Bardufoss in Norway, a cold weather training base for Royal Air Force, British Army and Royal Navy helicopter crews.

The Russian operation in Ukraine means London must step up its land and sea surveillance in the region, Wallace told a press conference, underlining "a commitment to increase the amount of surveying we do across the sea and land.

"We are going to effectively, permanently, have a ... Marine strike group permanently ... active in the Nordics," said Wallace as he underlined British commitment to protecting "our infrastructure, the cables that we see Russia target to make us vulnerable".

Britain participates in biennial exercises with partners in the North Atlantic but the Russian invasion of Ukraine has seen the area take on added strategic importance.

Wallace's Norwegian counterpart Odd Roger Enoksen said that his country, as a member of NATO but also a neighbour of Russia, "wants more allied activity up North".

He further noted, "The UK is our most important ally in Europe."

Some 30,000 troops from 25 NATO countries as well as non-member partners Sweden and Finland are currently on manoeuvres in Norway's far north, testing the alliance's capacity to defend against aggression.


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ICE WORLD
NATO says cannot allow 'security vacuum' in Arctic
Oslo (AFP) March 25, 2022
NATO cannot allow a security vacuum to develop in the Arctic, where the alliance sees "growing strategic competition" from Russia and China, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Friday. "We cannot afford a security vacuum in the High North. It could fuel Russian ambitions, expose NATO and risk miscalculation and misunderstandings," Stoltenberg said. "We also see an increased Chinese interest in the region. China has defined itself as a near Arctic state and aims to build a presence he ... read more

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