"They don't want
a military confrontation with NATO," U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Frederick Hodges
said.
A military vehicle hauls a
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Lt. Gen. Frederick
"Ben" Hodges made the remarks in an interview with Britain 's The Telegraph, as he participated in
military exercises to move 750 Patriot missiles to the outskirts of Warsaw , Poland .
"It's not an
assumption. There is a Russian threat," he told the Telegraph. "When
you look at the unsafe way Russian aircraft are flying without transponders in
proximity to civilian aircraft, that's not professional conduct."
One example of Moscow 's aggression, Lt. Gen. Hodges said, occurred last
month when Russia 's Danish ambassador
warned Copenhagen
against joining the U.S.-led NATO missile defense shield.
"I don't think
that Danes fully understand the consequence if Denmark joins the American-led
missile defence shield. If they do, then Danish warships will be targets for
Russian nuclear missiles," ambassador Mikhail Vanin said March 21.
The deployment of
the Patriot missiles in Poland
last month made headlines and intrigued citizens who saw the military convoys
roll across the German border. It's a sight that many haven't seen since the
Cold War -- and for younger people, ever.
The Pentagon moved
in the missiles as part of a joint military exercise, and intended as
diplomatic security reassurance toward Polish interests in the face of ongoing
hostilities in neighboring Ukraine .
"That's
exactly what it was about, reassuring our allies," Lt. Gen. Hodges said,
who noted recent Russian military activity in the region. Since seizing Crimea
last year, Moscow has sent troops to Ukraine and deployed missiles of their own to a
part of the country bordering Poland
and Lithuania .
It has also sent long-range nuclear-capable bombers to Crimea .
Lt. Gen. Hodges
said Washington takes Russia 's movements very seriously, and believes
a united NATO is key to resisting Moscow .
"The best
insurance we have against a showdown is that NATO stands together," he
said, while stating that military intervention is not inevitable.
"You have to
be militarily ready in order to enable effective diplomacy."
Lt. Gen. Hodges has
been the Army's primary commander in Europe since last year, and is working to
hold up the United States '
pledge to Eastern European nations that they won't have to face Russia
alone.
Last year, the
Pentagon withdrew its military equipment from the area, but again redeployed
tanks and fighting vehicles there -- and it's up to Lt. Gen. Hodges to
determine where to put them.
"We are not
interested in a fair fight with anyone," he said. "We want to have
overmatch in all systems. I don't think that we have fallen behind, but Russia has
closed the gap in certain capabilities. We don't want them to close that
gap."
With NATO firmly
united, Lt. Gen. Hodges' believes, Russia is far less likely to launch
invasions in areas it's interested in.
"They don't
want a military confrontation with NATO," he said. "Our alliance is
the most successful alliance in history and it has a lot of capability.
"If President Putin's objective is to fracture the alliance,
then he's going about it the wrong way."
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