‘Rest now, while we can.’ At Estonian NATO base,
troops prepare for Putin’s next move
‘We have prepared for Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and
all the Baltic Sea region to face the same kind of military incursion,’ says
base commander.
BY CHARLIE
DUXBURY
March 13,
2022 3:24 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/estonia-nato-base-troop-vladimir-putin-next-move/
TAPA,
Estonia — At NATO’s Tapa military base in central Estonia, Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine has sparked a heightened sense of purpose among the troops.
On a recent
weekday, and despite heavy snow, there were plenty of signs of activity in and
around the frontline camp — just 160 kilometers from the Russian border — as
soldiers wondered what Russian President Vladimir Putin’s future plans might
be.
In the town
of Tapa, north of the base, armed Estonian conscripts practiced street patrols,
methodically checking side roads for would-be invaders. Closer to the main
camp, a civilian police vehicle skidded to a halt to block oncoming traffic
before a convoy of eight hulking military trucks came barrelling along on a
training exercise. Armored vehicles could also be seen tracking the edge of a
forest further off-road.
Inside the
camp, Colonel Andrus Merilo, who as head of Estonia’s first infantry brigade
functions as base commander, said Moscow’s decision to launch a full-scale
invasion of one of its neighbors had focussed people’s minds on the task at
hand here: national defense and the potential threat Russia could pose toward
Estonia.
“Vigilance
is the key thing,” he said. “We must exercise it now, so we don’t miss any
indications that the threat will be directed towards Estonia.”
He said his
troops had long prepared for such a scenario based on lessons from Estonia’s
history — it was occupied by the Soviet Union for 48 years — and Russia’s
aggression against its neighbors over recent years.
“Our system
is built so that we have already foreseen this situation,” Merilo said.
“Ukraine is currently under the Russian invasion, but we have prepared for
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and all the Baltic Sea region to face the same kind
of military incursion.”
Indeed,
Baltic leaders have been flagging the risk of Russian aggression in the region
since at least 2008, when Russia invaded Georgia.
Former
Latvian Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis, now a European commissioner, said
this week that Putin would likely target the Baltic states to expand his
country’s access to the Baltic Sea, if he achieves his military aims in
Ukraine.
Baltic
leaders have called for NATO troops to be stationed at bases such as Tapa on a
permanent basis, but for now they remain on a system of permanent rotation.
Outside
Merilo’s office, on the edge of the parade ground, British troops could be seen
shouldering what looked like a batch of new rocket launchers, testing the
sights and getting the feel of the kit.
The flags
of NATO, Estonia, the U.K., the EU, France and Denmark — all of which have
troops here — flapped atop poles above their heads.
Sense of
mission
Across the
parade ground, at the camp headquarters of the British Royal Tank Regiment
Battlegroup, Lieutenant Colonel Simon Worth, the commanding officer, suggested
that if his troops had ever wondered why they had been posted to rural Estonia,
Russia’s renewed attack on Ukraine had definitively answered that question.
“Right now,
the strategic context and the continuous news feed that they see means that
there is no explanation necessary about why this is so important,” he said. “A
sense of purpose is an amazing thing.”
In a
storage facility down a rutted road from Worth’s office, a motor roared and a
crane lifted an engine into an armored vehicle while engineers called
instructions to each other.
A British
Challenger 2 tank parked outside stood ready for its next training exercise.
The tank commander in charge of it said he felt his soldiers had put their
months in Estonia — his battlegroup arrived in Tapa last September — to good
use learning how to operate the vehicle in soggier, more densely forested and
colder conditions than they had been used to.
Temperatures
here fell to minus 26 degrees in December, forcing the battlegroup to quickly
adapt its approach, commanding officer Worth said.
“Just
living in that [environment] is challenging, so fighting in it is even harder,”
he said.
A precursor
to the Tapa base was built by the Soviet Red Army during its occupation of
Estonia, which lasted between 1940 and 1941 and again between 1944 and 1991,
when the Soviet Union collapsed.
The
departure of the Soviet forces took several years and camp commander Merilo —
who enlisted in 1992 — said that his first job as a conscript was to guard an
Estonian base in case the Russians decided to attack rather than withdraw.
Along with
the other two Baltic states, Estonia joined the EU and NATO in 2004, cementing
its position among Western nations.
Since then,
bases like Tapa and Adazi in Latvia have been modernized and expanded, but
Baltic concerns that Russian forces could return have never gone away.
After
Russia invaded Georgia in 2008 and Ukraine in 2014, the Baltics called on NATO
to deploy troops across its eastern edges. In 2016, at a summit in Warsaw, NATO
leaders decided to rotate troops permanently through Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
and Poland.
Now, Baltic
leaders say NATO troops should be stationed here permanently with more and
better equipment as they fear Putin’s ultimate goal lies beyond seizing power
in Ukraine.
Merilo said
he believes taking Ukraine is only “an intermediate goal” for Putin and that
NATO needs to be prepared for him to go further.
Merilo said
he sleeps well, but not because he believes trouble isn’t coming.
“What we
prepared for for decades is now happening, there is nothing more to wonder
about,” he said. “We should get our rest now, while we can.”
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