Pentagon on alert as Russia steps up saber
rattling in Eastern Europe and beyond
BY ELLEN
MITCHELL - 04/04/21 04:25 PM EDT
Russia has upped its saber rattling in Eastern Europe
and the Arctic, a move that has put the Biden administration on alert.
In the past
two weeks, Moscow has moved to test Washington and its allies on land, in the
air and at sea with a buildup of military equipment in eastern Ukraine,
military flights near Alaskan airspace and submarine activity in the Arctic.
“I think
we’ve been very clear about the threats that we see from Russia across domains.
... We're taking them very, very seriously,” Pentagon press secretary John
Kirby said Wednesday.
The Defense
Department is overly observant of Russian activity after fighting resumed
between Moscow-backed separatists and Ukrainian soldiers in eastern Ukraine,
ending a cease-fire the two groups made last summer.
Twenty
Ukrainian soldiers have been killed in the skirmishes since the start of 2021.
The two
sides have been fighting since 2014 when Moscow seized and annexed Crimea from
Ukraine, a conflict that Kyiv asserts has killed 14,000 people since its start.
Russian
jets and bombers have also frequently flown near allied airspace, forcing NATO
jets to scramble to respond 10 times on Monday alone.
In
addition, in late March, three Russian nuclear ballistic missile submarines
simultaneously broke through several feet of ice in the Arctic in a military
drill, a maneuver that comes as the Kremlin has moved to raise its defenses in
the Arctic.
Russia’s
aggressive actions have prompted U.S. European Command to raise its alert
status to its highest level, and the activity in Ukraine, in particular, has
prompted Biden’s top national security leaders to call their Ukrainian
counterparts and other leaders in the region.
Joint
Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley on Wednesday spoke by phone with
Ukraine Chief of General Staff Lt. Gen. Ruslan Khomchak as well as Russia's top
officer, Chief of the General Staff Gen. Valery Gerasimov.
A day
later, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin called his Ukrainian counterpart,
Minister of Defense Andriy Taran, to “discuss the regional security situation”
and condemn “recent escalations of Russian aggressive and provocative actions
in eastern Ukraine,” according to Kirby.
National
security adviser Jake Sullivan last week also spoke with his Ukrainian counterpart,
as did Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who said he discussed "ways of
strengthening security cooperation" with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro
Kuleba.
All leaders
have pledged that Washington would stand by Kyiv.
But Russia
on Friday warned NATO against deploying troops to Ukraine, threatening that
such actions would escalate tensions and that Moscow would be forced to
respond.
“There is
no doubt such a scenario would lead to a further increase in tensions close to
Russia’s borders. Of course, this would call for additional measures from the
Russian side to ensure its security,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told
reporters on Friday.
The head of
U.S. Northern Command, Air Force Gen. Glen VanHerck, said the posturing is due
to the United States and Russia being back in “great power competition,” much
like during the Cold War.
“Clearly,
Russia is trying to reassert on a global stage their influence and their
capabilities,” VanHerck told reporters on Wednesday.
“The
difference between the past and now is the intercepts are more complex —
multiaccess, multiplatform — and oftentimes they’ll enter the [air defense
identification zone] and stay for hours,” he added.
In 2020,
the North American Aerospace Defense Command, which is in charge of defending
North American airspace, responded to more Russian military flights off the
coast of Alaska than in any year since the end of the Cold War.
Moscow’s
bellicose stance appears to have continued into 2021, giving President Biden a
foreign policy challenge in the early days of his administration.
Last month,
when asked if he thought Russian President Vladimir Putin was a “killer” Biden
answered, “I do,” adding that the Russian leader will “pay a price” for the
country’s influence operation targeting the 2020 election and other
cyberattacks.
Backing up
his hard-line stance, Biden in late February approved another $125 million
worth of security aid to Ukraine to defend its borders against Russia. The
money adds to the more than $2 billion in lethal assistance the U.S. government
has sent to the country since Crimea’s annexation.
It remains
to be seen whether fighting in eastern Ukraine intensifies or how NATO would
respond, but the Pentagon has made clear it is on alert.
“We're
monitoring the situation with respect to Ukrainian military reports of Russian
military placements and forces along the border ... very, very closely,” Kirby
said Thursday.
“We
certainly call on the Russians to be more transparent about what this is about,
but we've learned from bitter history not to just take at face value Russian
claims of their intentions,” he added.


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