US May Temporarily Deploy Patriot Missiles to Baltic Region: Officials
US May Temporarily Deploy Patriot Missiles to Baltic Region: Officials
The US military is considering sending a Patriot missile battery to the Baltic region for NATO exercises this summer, US defence officials said, though the move would only be temporary.

Vilnius: The US military is considering sending a Patriot missile battery to the Baltic region for NATO exercises this summer, US defence officials said, though the move would only be temporary.

Speaking to reporters in Vilnius late on Tuesday, two defence officials said the United States is moving enhanced air defence assets into the region as part of multinational air drills.

The move comes amid heightened tensions with Russia, which is itself holding massive military exercises in Belarus and Kaliningrad in September.

The so-called "Zapad" drills will see Russia showcase new hardware and upgrade existing systems in its western military region, the officials said.

Moscow last year deployed nuclear-capable Iskander missiles into its Kaliningrad exclave, which borders Lithuania and Poland, rattling nearby NATO members.

Pentagon chief Jim Mattis was in Lithuania on Wednesday to visit a German NATO battle group and Dutch and Belgian soldiers at a training ground outside Vilnius. At a brief press conference with Lithuanian President

Dalia Grybauskaite, Mattis refused to discuss whether Vilnius had requested a permanent Patriot missile deployment.

"We will make those decisions in consultation with the Lithuania government," he said.

"Everyone knows this is not an offensive capability." The Patriot is a mobile air defence system made by

Raytheon designed to intercept tactical ballistic missiles, low-flying cruise missiles and aircraft.

Mattis's trip to Lithuania is his first to eastern Europe as defence secretary and his meeting with Grybauskaite, a very vocal critic of Russian leader Vladimir Putin, could be interpreted as a signal for Moscow.

The highly militarised Russian exclave of Kaliningrad is right next door and Putin is prone to sabre rattling there.

A US-led NATO battalion that is stationed nearby in Poland and the German-led battalion that Mattis will visit are the first line of defence for the so-called "Suwalki Gap". NATO experts see the vulnerable stretch of territory as key to eastern flank security. The battalions will hold exercises focused on defending the Gap from June 10 to 24.

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