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  • NATO: Alliance reaches the Black Sea

    ANSA English Media Service
    March 30, 2004

    NATO: ALLIANCE REACHES THE BLACK SEA

    VIENNA

    By Gaetano Stellacci

    (ANSA) - VIENNA, March 30 - The enlargement of NATO to 26
    states after the accession of Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia,
    Slovenia, Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria has moved the
    alliance's eastern border hundreds of kilometres from the Baltic
    to the Black Sea.

    The thousand kilometre-long line between the 25th and 30th
    meridians from the Baltic to the Black Sea, two thirds of which
    now wash the shores of NATO physically separates western Europe
    from the rest of the Eurasian continent.

    Apart from Russia, Belarus, Ukraine and Moldova on the east,
    NATO's southern borders reach the states of central Asia,
    including Iran, Georgia, Armenia, Iraq and Syria. Italy is no
    longer the western NATO border, which has moved southeast to
    Slovenia. The former Yugoslav states have also shown their
    interest in joining the North Atlantic Pact.

    The new southern border means a border of poverty both for
    NATO and the EU. Unemployment in Belarus, Ukraine and Moldova
    has reached 70 percent. Problems and despair more often force
    people to drug abuse and alcoholism to whuich are added the
    recurrence of tuberculosis and the growing problem of the
    AIDS/HIV virus.

    NATO will become responsible for the air security of the
    Baltic states from Tuesday. Belgium has already sent its first
    team of four patrol aircraft. Italy has taken over the
    protection of the air space of Slovenia, which has remained
    without an airforce since its separation from Yugoslavia.

    The danger of increased tension with Russia which borders
    Lithuania and Estonia will be diffused by NATO and was not a
    subject for NATO's new Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer,
    despite alarms raised in Moscow.

    NATO aircraft are capable of flying the distance between
    Estonia and St Petersburg in seven minutes, Russian Defence
    Minister Sergei Ivanov said.

    Russian leaders seem to dislike even more the enlargement of
    the EU which will include Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia,
    Hungary and the Baltic states in May, all of them former Soviet
    satellites which have retained their economic relations with
    Russia after the fall of communism.

    Their accession to the common European market will make these
    relations with Russia weaker. Economic experts in Moscow believe
    this will cause damage worth 150 million euro a year.

    Initially the seven new NATO members will contribute about
    175,000 soldiers from their regular forces and 3,000 tanks, most
    of them obsolete. The seven former communist states, however,
    are also the most faithful adherents of the U.S. military
    doctrine and when Europe split over the Iraqi crisis all of them
    supported Washington. (ANSA)
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