Site icon WDN

NATO brigades in the Baltic states: new chapters in the long march toward deployment

On 17 October, the defence ministers of Estonia and the United Kingdom signed a bilateral Defence Roadmap, outlining steps to further enhance the British military presence in Estonia. From July 2025, the UK will maintain a light brigade on standby, capable of rapid deployment to Estonia if required. The deployment of these forces will be practised regularly. Both nations will also develop plans for the pre-positioning of brigade’s stocks and military equipment in Estonia.

On the same date, a ceremony was held to mark the transfer of command authority from the NATO Multinational Battlegroup to the NATO Multinational Brigade in Latvia.

On 3 October, the Seimas of the Republic of Lithuania ratified an agreement on defence cooperation with Germany, which was signed in September. It established the legal framework for the operation of the German contingent, which will be permanently stationed in Lithuania as part of the expanding German brigade, along with provisions for the presence of soldiers’ families. It regulates the use of selected military facilities and the storage of armament and military equipment, while also creating the legal basis for setting up German institutions (for example, in education), which will be granted tax exemptions. Lithuania has committed to providing appropriate accommodation and logistical support.

Since 2017, NATO’s multinational battalion-sized battlegroups have been deployed in the Baltic states on a permanent rotational basis (one more battlegroup was formed in Poland). Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, NATO resolved to assign additional high-readiness forces to these battlegroups. If required, these forces can be rapidly deployed from the framework nations (the UK in Estonia, Canada in Latvia, and Germany in Lithuania) and form a full brigade alongside the battalion-sized battlegroups in the host countries. The Baltic states have secured commitments from the framework nations to expand their presence to brigade level, albeit under different terms. The aforementioned agreements represent further steps in this process (see ‘Expectations versus reality: NATO brigades in the Baltic states?’).

Commentary

Source

Exit mobile version