|
news
Apr 03, 2010Now or never: get rid of nuclear weapons.
Apr 02, 2010European Days of Action against nuclear weapons
Feb 10, 2010US Missile Interceptors Planned for Romania by 2015
Feb 05, 2010Romania accepts US 'invitation' to host anti-missile shield
Feb 02, 201050 activists enter "Dal Molin" base and chain them selves to the cranes
Feb 02, 2010Blenheim Sun reports on "courageous" protests at Waihopai spy base
Jan 27, 2010Mapping the troop deployment to Afghanistan
Jan 07, 2010Yemen to let US setup air base on its soil
Jan 07, 2010The question no US official dare ask
Jan 06, 2010 Waihopai Spybase Protest, January 22-24
Jan 06, 2010An alliance larger than one issue
Jan 05, 2010U.S. deploys fleet of interceptor missile ships to Mediterranean
Dec 09, 2009Initiative Concerning Pelindaba Treaty for African Nuclear Weapons Free Zone
Nov 14, 2009US health agency to take 'fresh look' at Vieques
Nov 14, 2009Obama lays out America’s Asia-Pacific agenda
Nov 13, 2009Pentagon urged to keep Guam better informed on Marine transfer
Nov 07, 2009US 8th Army headquarters may stay in Korea
Nov 07, 2009 USA to launch ICBM Minutman III on Nov 18 from Vandenberg Air Force Base to the Marshall Islands
Nov 05, 2009US may locate NATO missile command in Czech Republic
Nov 05, 2009US granted access to ALL Colombian airports!!
Oct 18, 2009Pentagon to spend over $100 million on new bases in Bulgaria and Romania
The United States government is forking over $100 million to build new military bases in Bulgaria and Romania. Last month, the Obama administration ended plans to construct missile-defense shields in other parts of eastern Europe. In September, the Obama administration stated they would cease any construction of a missile-defense shield and troops in Czech Republic and Poland, however, the Pentagon is planning to spend more than $100 million to build new military bases in Bulgaria and Romania, according to Stars and Stripes. By Andrew Moran, for Digital Journal More than 2,000 soldiers are taking part in exercises near the two eastern European nations. This latest commitment by the Pentagon consists of a $50 million military base in Romania, which will house 1,600 US troops and a $60 million base in Bulgaria to house 2,500 soldiers. Commander of Joint Task Force-East Colonel Gary Russ said that government officials and citizens of the two countries have not criticized any such plans of creating the bases since the US missile-defense arrangement was scrapped last month, "We have made commitments and they have never made any overt conversation along the lines of pulling out of JTF-East. I think both of these [bases] illustrate great commitment [to Eastern Europe]." These bases, which are strictly funded by the United States, will be shared between the US and the two host-nations. Analysts believe this new operation is part of a global redeployment strategy and, in the end, will cost less but be closer to the strife in the Middle East, at least according to James Robbins, a senior fellow in national security affairs with the Washington-based think tank American Foreign Policy Council. He further added that this strategy was already being implemented under the Bush administration. "It would be telling Russia that that U.S. is not interested in Eastern Europe and telling those countries that they are basically on their own." Nevertheless, this latest move will not be just military bases. Ellen O. Tauscher, Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, recently told the House Armed Services Committee earlier, according to Foreign Policy, "We will further demonstrate our commitment to Poland by continuing with plans to rotate a U.S. Army Patriot unit to Poland once a bilateral Supplemental Status of Forces Agreement is agreed, ratified and implemented." However, not all Americans support this new move by the US government. Doug Bandow of Campaign for Liberty, a former Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan and an Editor for the Inquiry magazine, recently pegged the questions, "Why is the US building unnecessary facilities in countries which the U.S. has no need to defend? Is there anything for which the American people are not expected to pay?" The Washington Post also reported that Poland and Czech Republic are being considered by the Obama administration to take part in European defense of Iran's possible development and deployment of medium and short-range missiles comments add comment
If you have an account please login before adding a comment. login
|
|
CopyRight© 2009 No Bases. This site is an initiative from No Bases and was developped by EasyMind.
|