VilNews

THE VOICE OF INTERNATIONAL LITHUANIA

18 May 2024
www.holidayinnvilnius.lt/
VilNews has its own Google archive! Type a word in the above search box to find any article.

You can also follow us on Facebook. We have two different pages. Click to open and join.
VilNews Notes & Photos
For messages, pictures, news & information
VilNews Forum
For opinions and discussions
Click on the buttons to open and read each of VilNews' 18 sub-sections

Pentagon steers more money to Eastern European allies relying more on them as West cuts budgets


A Lithuanian soldier provides security for American Civil Affairs Soldiers during a market assessment in Dujayli, Iraq, July 9, 2008.
Photographer: Sgt. Daniel West,
Multi-National Division-Central.

The Pentagon is steering more money toward Eastern European allies fighting in Afghanistan even as it prepares further reductions of U.S. forces in nations to the west such as Germany.

The U.S. plans to spend as much as $100 million, 33 percent more than last year, to provide training and equipment to countries helping conduct special operations missions and training for Afghan forces fighting the Taliban, according to Pentagon figures released today.

The biggest increases are going to Hungary, Poland, Romania and Lithuania, which have made outsize contributions of troops to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization-led coalition in Afghanistan.

The Pentagon is relying more on Eastern European allies, most of them in NATO, as traditional alliance members such as the U.K., the Netherlands and Germany cut their own defense budgets. Western European allies also are looking to reduce their forces in Afghanistan in proportion to the Pentagon’s withdrawal of about a third of its forces by September.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said last week that the U.S. will halve the number of conventional brigades in Europe as it cuts $490 billion over the next decade and turns more attention to Asia.

The planned cut to two brigades will remove 6,000 to 10,000 troops, most of them in Western Europe. The U.S. had almost 80,000 military personnel stationed in Europe as of December 2010, more than 54,000 of them in Germany, according to the Defense Department’s website.

The Pentagon plans to compensate for the reductions by rotating more troops into the region and conducting additional joint training and exercises.

Category : News



VilNews e-magazine is published in Vilnius, Lithuania. Editor-in-Chief: Mr. Aage Myhre. Inquires to the editorseditor@VilNews.com.
Code of Ethics: See Section 2 – about VilNewsVilNews  is not responsible for content on external links/web pages.
HOW TO ADVERTISE IN VILNEWS.
All content is copyrighted © 2011. UAB ‘VilNews’.

مبلمان اداری صندلی مدیریتی صندلی اداری میز اداری وبلاگدهی گن لاغری شکم بند لاغری تبلیغات کلیکی آموزش زبان انگلیسی پاراگلایدر ساخت وبلاگ خرید بلیط هواپیما پروتز سینه پروتز باسن پروتز لب میز تلویزیون