New early-warning radar

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years after the Baltic states regained independence in 1991, virtually all Russia’s bases were abandoned and its troops withdrawn.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.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Really big shoes to fill

Guinness World Records officially declares that an Australian man has the world's largest feet. more »

The Belgian Shepherd that can detect cancer

It's a sniffer dog with a difference: a military Belgian Shepherd that has been trained to detect signs of prostate cancer in patients' urine. According to French scientists, the dog can do it far more accurately than any currently available scientific technique. more »

Extreme weather and looming hurricane season keep scientists on alert

This week marks the beginning of hurricane season in the United States and scientists will be watching closely in the wake of extreme weather patterns that have devastated the Midwest. One of the questions they're trying to answer focuses on the impact of climate change and global warming. more »

Spanish cucumbers blamed for outbreak

Spanish cucumbers are being blame for an E.coli outbreak that killed 10 people in Germany and sickened hundreds. more »

Serbia. Protesters clash with police

Protesters clash with police as pro Mladic rallies continue in the Serbian capital. more »

Japan short of Geiger counters

Japan, Geiger counters, radiation leak, Fuji Electric more »

Chinese painting sets auction record

Chinese artist Qi Baishi's ink-wash work is auctioned for 65.4 million U.S. Dollars (425 million yuan) in Beijing, setting a new record for contemporary Chinese painting. more »

Violent crackdown on protesters

Georgian police wearing full riot gear used water cannons and rubber bullets to disperse protesters in Tiblisi. more »

Scientists revive ancient spider in stunning 3D detail

CT scanning has allowed scientists to identify and recreate in stunning three-dimensional detail, an ancient spider trapped in amber for 50 million years... more »

Lost your pet zebra? Scientists can find it for you

Researchers in Chicago have developed a new barcoding system that can identify and track zebras by their unique stripe patterns. The scientists say their computer program can also be modified to keep track of endangered species like tigers and some giraffe species. more »