The entrance tunnel to a bunker in Bodo, built during the Cold
War and modeled after American installations, that now houses
the Norwegian military command. Credit Bryan Denton for
The New York Times
|
BODO, Norway(NY Times) — From his
command post burrowed deep into a mountain of quartz and slate north of the Arctic Circle , the 54-year-old commander of the Norwegian
military’s operations headquarters watches time flowing backward, pushed into
reverse by surging Russian military activity redolent of East-West sparring
during the Cold War.
“I am what you
could call a seasoned Cold Warrior,” the commander, Lt. Gen. Morten Haga Lunde,
said, speaking in an underground complex built to withstand a nuclear blast. As
a result, he added, he is not too alarmed by increased Russian military
activity along NATO’s northern flank.
“It is more or less
the same as when I started,” said General Lunde, who began his career tracking
Soviet warplanes as a Norwegian Air Force navigator in the early 1980s.
After a long hiatus
following the December 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, when Moscow
grounded its strategic bombers for lack of fuel, spare parts and will to
project power, President Vladimir V. Putin’s newly assertive Russia “is back to normal
behavior,” General Lunde said.
The pilot of a Norwegian Air Force F-16 fighter upon returning to Bodo from a mission to intercept Russian military aircraft over the |
Last year, Norway
intercepted 74 Russian warplanes off its coast, 27 percent more than in 2013,
scrambling F-16 fighters from a military air base in Bodo to monitor and
photograph them. This is far fewer than the hundreds of Soviet planes Norway tracked
off its coast at the height of the Cold War. However, last year’s total was a
drastic increase from the 11 Russian warplanes Norway spotted 10 years earlier.
In Norway, a
country that takes pride in championing peace — witnessed in its brokering of
pacts between Israelis and Palestinians and its awarding of the Nobel Peace
Prize — what General Lunde called the “new old normal” has come as a jolt. It
has set off debate over military spending and highlighted how quickly Mr. Putin
has shredded the certainties of the post-Cold War era.
“Russia has created
uncertainty about its intentions, so there is, of course, unpredictability,”
Norway’s defense minister, Ine Eriksen Soreide, said in an interview in Oslo,
adding that the military was being restructured to deal better with new risks,
particularly in the Arctic.
Nobody expects Russia to
invade. So far, its warplanes have taken care not to stray into Norwegian airspace,
unlike in the Baltics, where they regularly violate borders.
But the spike in
Russian military activity along Norway’s coast has added an unexpected measure
of verisimilitude to a new television thriller called “Occupied,” which, based
on an idea by Norway’s pre-eminent crime writer, Jo Nesbo, explores how the
country would respond to conquest by Russia. The multipart series is scheduled
to air in September. When Mr. Nesbo first proposed the idea years ago, he was
told it was much too far-fetched.
Russia has itself
fed the scaremongering with bursts of belligerent language, like the recent
comment by Moscow’s ambassador to Copenhagen that Danish warships “will be
targets for Russia’s nuclear weapons” if Denmark contributes radar to a
Europe-based missile defense system planned by NATO. Denmark ’s foreign minister, Martin
Lidegaard, dismissed the threat as “unacceptable.”
Russia’s
muscle-flexing is due in part simply to the fact that the country is spending
more on its military and has re-established abilities eroded during the
post-Soviet chaos of the 1990s. When Mr. Putin first became president in 2000, Russia spent
$9.2 billion on its military, but this has since risen 10 times and will
increase again this year despite a slumping economy, hammered by a collapse in
the price of oil and also by Western sanctions.
“The signal they
are sending is that the situation in the 1990s was an exception,” General Lunde
said.
Jens Stoltenberg, a
former Norwegian prime minister who became NATO’s secretary general late last
year, said that Russia ’s
new assertiveness was not just a result of increased funding and revived
ability. He said it was also “part of a broader picture where we see that Russia is willing to use force,” most notably in
Georgia in 2008 and, more recently, in Ukraine .
“It is this total
picture that gives us reason for concern,” Mr. Stoltenberg said.
Russian air
activity along the borders of NATO, the northern parts of which are patrolled
by fighters based in Bodo, increased 50 percent from 2013 to last year,
according to the alliance. At the same time, Russia sharply increased so-called
snap military exercises, training maneuvers that, in violation of established
procedure, were either announced at the last minute or kept secret.
One such exercise
was used to cover Russia ’s
furtive seizure of Crimea in March 2014, but most seem aimed simply at showing
NATO that Russia
is back as a serious power. Among those was an exercise held last month across
from Norway ’s northern
border with Russia
— just a week after Norwegian forces held their own, much smaller exercise,
Joint Viking, which was announced two years in advance.
Katarzyna Zysk, a researcher
at the Norwegian Institute of Defense Studies, said Mr. Putin had emphasized
strengthening Russia’s military presence in the Arctic; equipping the Northern
Fleet, based in Murmansk, with new nuclear submarines; setting up a string of
bases along the vast northern coast; and reopening abandoned Soviet-era
military facilities like the base at Alakurtti, close to Finland.
“For them, it is the
door to NATO,” she continued.
This link, she
said, has made Russia
particularly suspicious of Svalbard, a demilitarized cluster of
Norwegian-controlled islands in the high Arctic that Moscow believes serves as a platform for
eavesdropping and other covert activities by NATO.
While neither Russia nor Norway officially views the other
as a direct threat, “the potential for inadvertent escalation is very serious,”
Ms. Zysk said.
On at least one
occasion, a Russian warplane has come dangerously close to hitting a Norwegian
aircraft in what some see as a pattern of reckless flying. In January, two
Russian Tu-95 bombers flew down the Norwegian coast and then, their
transponders turned off, crossed into the English Channel ,
playing havoc with civilian air traffic and prompting the Royal Air Force to
scramble.
If anything,
however, Russia ’s
behavior has undermined its one clear and constant long-term objective: the
weakening of NATO, which the Kremlin’s chief propagandist, Dmitry K. Kiselyov,
described last year as a “cancerous tumor” that must be removed.
But Ms. Soreide,
the defense minister, said Norway
had stopped cutting and would increase military spending this year by 3.3
percent, despite economic troubles caused by the collapse in the price of oil, Norway ’s
principal export.
NATO’s tightening
bonds are on display daily at the Bodo air base, where Norwegian fighter
pilots, idled for years by the absence of Russian planes to follow, once again
have a sense of purpose. A busy NATO outpost during the Cold War, Bodo served
as a hub for U-2 spy plane flights over the Soviet Union .
Francis Gary Powers, the U-2 pilot imprisoned in Moscow in 1960, was on his way to Bodo when
his plane was shot down.
But once the Soviet Union unraveled, Bodo fell into the doldrums,
leaving Norwegian fighter pilots with nothing much to do.
“After the Berlin
Wall came down, everything was very quiet,” said the veteran commander of the
331st Air Squadron, whose F-16 fighters are on round-the-clock alert as part of
NATO’s air defense network. “Now it is a lot more interesting.”
Linked by secure
telephone to the Combined Air Operations Center of NATO in Uedem , Germany ,
his squadron gets a call whenever Russian planes appear off the Norwegian coast
and then has only 15 minutes to get airborne.
“It is like doing
extreme sports,” the commander said, speaking on the condition of anonymity
because of military rules. He described a special thrill in being able to get
close to and photograph new Russian aircraft, adding that he had been the first
to take a picture of Russia ’s
Su-34, a new fighter bomber. “That was very exciting,” he said.
“We are now getting
back to the normal way of thinking,” the squadron commander added.
But he questioned
whether public opinion had caught up with the fact that a predictable post-Cold
War era of East-West comity was now over. “The problem in Norway is that
we are so rich, fat and happy that we are not worried enough,” he said.
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