Published 19:43 IST, June 6th 2022
NATO's naval exercise BALTOPS 22 to kick off from June 5; Sweden, Finland set to take part
NATO will begin the 51st edition of its annual Baltic Operations (BALTOPS 22) exercise early next month, which will take place in the Baltic Sea from June 5.
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rth Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) will begin 51st edition of its annual Baltic Operations (BALTOPS 22) exercise early next month, which will take place in Baltic Sea from June 5 to 17, according to Pentagon Press Secretary John F. Kirby. He mentioned that 14 NATO countries will participate in BALTOPS 22, including Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Nerlands, rway, Poland, Turkey, United Kingdom, and United States.
Furr, this year will also see participation from NATO associate countries Finland and Sweden, both of which have recently applied to join NATO, according to US official. drill will include 45 naval units, 75 aircraft, and over 7,000 military people, according to Kirby. He furr informed Sweden is hosting this year's BALTOPS 22 and it is also commemorating 500th anniversary of its own fleet.
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To strengn cohesion and capabilities of NATO allies and partners, maritime and air forces will work toger to practice medical evacuation, joint personnel recovery, air defence, maritime interdiction operations, anti-submarine warfare, mine countermeasures, and amphibious operations, as in previous iterations of BALTOPS. US Sixth Fleet is leing this year's BALTOPS exercise, which will be carried out by NATO's Striking Forces.
NATO chief accepted Sweden and Finland's membership applications
It is worth ting that NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg accepted Sweden and Finland's membership applications amid fears that Russia would dam rdic countries. However, Turkey, which has previously warned of impeding Sweden and Finland's preparations, has w halted initial procedure of US-backed military alliance. Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has asked NATO partners to recognise and support Ankara's security concerns.
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While NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has repeatedly stated that two countries would be welcomed "with open arms," Turkey has blocked ir membership bids, accusing m of providing safe haven to members of Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which Turkey and its Western allies consider a terrorist organisation. During lengthy application process, both rdic countries requested security assurances while waiting for full membership, with assured backing from allies under Article V of NATO's founding treaty.
Im: AP
06:29 IST, June 5th 2022