Moscow said it would have a new early-warning radar up by the end of the year to replace the station in Skrunda, Latvia.
Published:
26 July 2000 y., Wednesday
Moscow said it would have a new early-warning radar up by the end of the year to replace the station in Skrunda, Latvia, which Russia turned over to Latvia last year.
The radar will be in Baranovichi, in neighboring Belarus. Russia has said the lack of a radar in the region has left its western flank vulnerable. Western experts also have expressed concern that a weakened air defense system increased the chances of dangerous false nuclear-attack alarm.
Russia handed control of Skrunda over to Latvia on October 21, 1999, formally ending its resented, half-century military presence in the Baltic states.
From 1971 until the radar was switched off, Skrunda was a key component in Russia’s air-defense network, responsible for scanning the western skies for any incoming missiles.
In the years after the Baltic states regained independence in 1991, virtually all Russia’s bases were abandoned and its troops withdrawn. But as part of a its pullout treaty with Moscow and at the urging of Western governments, Latvia grudgingly agreed in 1994 to let Russia operate the Skrunda radar for four more years. Russia switched the radar off in 1998, then had 18 months more to dismantle it.
Šaltinis:
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
At the fall meetings of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe on 8 October in Palermo, Lithuania’s Permanent Representative to the OSCE Ambassador Renatas Norkus will deliver a speech about the strengthening of ties between the OSCE and the Mediterranean partners.
more »
Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation Sergey Lavrov thanked Lithuania for helping Russia to fight forest fires.
more »
Lithuania will encourage the governments of the OSCE participating states to take more pro-active measures to ensure the safety journalists and to put more effort into investigating cases of violence against journalists, and will emphasize the importance of media self-regulation.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaite presented letters of credence to Dainius Junevičius as the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Lithuania to the Arab Republic of Egypt.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė presented letters of credence to Loreta Zakarevičienė as the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Lithuania to the Republic of Poland.
more »
President Dalia Grybauskaitė extended congratulations to President Christian Wulff of Germany on Unity Day.
more »
At a meeting of a group of Moldova’s friends on 30 September in Chisinau, attended by eight foreign ministers, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Audronius Ažubalis stressed EU assistance in support of Moldova’s efforts to consolidate democracy in the country.
more »
Dalia Grybauskaitė congratulated Demetris Christofias, President of the Republic of Cyprus, on the 50th anniversary of independence of the Republic of Cyprus.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė received the President of the Parliament of Luxembourg, Laurent Mosar.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė attended the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Resolution adopted in 1960 by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe "On the situation in the Baltic States on the twentieth anniversary of their forcible incorporation into the Soviet Union", in the Seimas of the Republic of Lithuania.
more »