On NATO's front lines, a difference of opinion on how to best respond to Russia - Action News
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On NATO's front lines, a difference of opinion on how to best respond to Russia

The U.S. and its NATO allies have started planning to bolster military power in eastern Europe. But another key player has not: Germany. In the Baltic nation of Lithuania, CBC News heard from both perspectives.

Germany says beefing up NATO's eastern border could provoke Russia. Many disagree.

A German armoured personnel carrier and its crew arrives in Rukla, Lithuania, at the start of a six-month assignment in the Baltic nation. (Chris Brown/CBC)

With NATO pondering how to appropriately respond to Russia's mobilization along theUkrainian border, a small element of possible deterrence arrived this weekin Rukla, Lithuania.

Flatbed railcars, loaded with armoured infantry vehicles from Germany, were met by soldiers from the nearby NATO base,who promptly unloaded the noisy, tracked machines and drove them off in a convoyalong the narrow, rural roads.

The vehicles and the troops that man themare replacing othersreturning to Germany, as one rotation ends and another begins all part of a NATO strategy in the region known asEnhanced Forward Presence, which dates back to 2017.

In Lithuania, Germany is providing the core of the battle group for the alliance, explained commanding officer, German Lt.-Col.Hagen Ruppelt.

"We are here because the Lithuanian government and the Baltic states are perceiving a threat around them," hetold CBC News during a visit to see a small part of the German operation.

German Lt.-Col. Hagen Ruppelt is the commander of NATO's Enhanced Forward Presence battle group in Lithuania, which is about 1,200 members strong. (Jason Ho/CBC)

Similar NATO basesare in place in Estonia and Latvia, led by British and Canadian commanders respectively and all three with roughly 1,200 soldiers each.

As of late, the pressing political question for the 72-year-old NATO has been whether it urgently needs to further beef up its troops and equipmentin the Baltic states that border Russia.

Or, alternatively, show a more restrained stancein the hopes of not provoking the Kremlin.

Germany an outlier among NATO members

Tensions have soared in the region amid the buildup of Russian troops near Ukraine's border, prompting fears that an invasion could be on the horizon. Western military experts estimate there are already as many as 127,000 Russian troops near theborder and tens of thousand moretaking up positions inside Belarus,within 200kilometers ofKyiv.

Russia-backed Ukrainian separatists have been fighting government forces in the Donbas region since 2014. Recently, Russia's military manoeuvres near the Ukraine border have made NATO members, including the Baltic states near Russia's western border, nervous. (CBC)

Russia denieshaving any such plans and insists it's just running military drills.It has also said its objective is to negotiate a security deal with the United States that would see foreign forces removed from the countries along its border, ensure Ukraine is off limits for NATO troops and providea guarantee Ukraine would never be admitted to the alliance.

The U.S., Europe, and NATO have rejected Russia's demands but are offeringa dialogue on a range of strategic issues.

But while the U.S. and manyNATO allies are stepping up their response plans in eastern Europe amid the standoff, Germanyremains an outlier.

WATCH | Germany holds off onadditional support for Ukraine:

NATO members grapple over how to deter Russian threat against Ukraine

3 years ago
Duration 2:11
With heightened tensions in Ukraine and other parts along NATOs eastern edge, NATO countries are divided over whether to ramp up their presence in places like Lithuania.

Germany has vast commercial interests with Russia and buys huge amounts of natural gas from the country,leading to accusations that its government is putting its commercial interests first.

The Nord Stream 2 pipelinebuilt by Russia, with extensive German helphas been completed and is awaiting final regulatory approval.The project is set to double Russia's gas export capacity.

But the United States has vowed the gas will never flowif Russia attacks.

Germany, on the other hand,has been non-committal about the pipeline's fate should that happen.

German soldiers are briefed as their equipment is unloaded at a railyard in Rukla, Lithuania. (Jason Ho/CBC)

The German battle group commander, however,insists the only considerations that matter for troop deployments are strategic ones not economic.

"The more forces you bring in, that can be perceived as a provocation and an increase of tensions.That is not our intent," said Ruppelt.

Lithuania sees 'credible military force' as right response

In an interview with CBC News in the capital of Vilnius,Lithuania's deputy defence minister emphatically rejected the logic that bolstering forces along NATO's eastern flank or directly helping Ukraine will inflame the situation and provoke Russia.

"I think deploying more troops to the eastern flank is the only rightresponse to the current escalation,"said Margiris Abukeviius.

"Some say this would continue the [Russian] escalation,but I really believe that the only thing that could stop the Russians from escalating further is credible military force on the other side."

Margiris Abukeviius is Lithuania's deputy minister of defence. (Jason Ho/CBC)

Abukeviius insisted his remarks should not be taken as criticism of the German NATO role in his country,which he says is deeply valued. "When it comes to Germany,we have full confidence.They are really one of the key contributors to our security and deterrence."

For Lithuania,the massive military presence now gathered on Russia's border with Ukraine,as well as in neighbouring Belarus, amounts to an existential threat.

Lithuania shares a 700-kilometreborder with Belarusto the east,and a 300-kilometer border with Russia's European enclave, Kaliningrad,to the west.

Some signs Russia's moves go beyond military exercises

Along with its soldiers, Russia has also moved in mobile hospitals,pontoon bridges and its most sophisticated anti-missile interceptors,the S-400. None of those deployments are standard for typical exercises,say military experts.

The Gediminas Castle Tower is the most striking landmark in Lithuania's capital of Vilnius. (Chris Brown/CBC)

"I think this worries a lot of people,seeing how many Russian troops are gathered around;that thiscould go out of control and that it wouldn't stop in Ukraine," saidAbukeviius.

Germany's insistence on not trying to agitate Moscow by keeping its troop levels consistent in eastern Europe is increasingly incontrast to several other NATO nations.

On Thursday,four F-16s from Denmark arrived at a NATO airbase in Lithuania to bolster the alliance's air-policing capabilities in the region. Lithuania's president was scheduled to hold a welcoming ceremony Friday for the 80 or so Danish personnel accompanying the aircraft.

The U.S., the U.K.,Norway, Spain, France andthe Czech Republicare also weighing sending more troops into eastern Europe.

Germany has also decided not to provide any lethal assistance directly to Ukraine,opting instead to send 5,000 helmets,along with medical supplies.

While the Ukrainiangovernment has said it is satisfied with the level of German support,some inside the country are not. Kyiv mayor and former champion boxer Vitali Klitschko called the German offer "a joke" that left him "speechless."

Germany has also been criticized for holding up some shipments of anti-tank missiles that countriessuch as Estonia and Lithuaniaare trying to send to Ukraine, by not issuingpermits for the German-origin weapons.

Canada resistingcalls for combat support

In some ways,Germany's situation mirrors Canada's,which holdsacommand role at the NATO base next door, in Latvia.

The Trudeau government has also refused repeated requests from the Ukrainian government and pro-Ukraine groups at home to send armamentsand is insteadproviding non-combat military trainers and intelligence assistance.

Foreign Affairs Minister Mlanie Joly visits with Canadian soldiers in Latvia in December 2021. (Stephanie Jenzer/CBC)

In the Baltics,there is overwhelming public support for a stronger NATO presence,says political scientist Margarita eelgyt,who teaches at Vilnius University.

"In the last year,86 per centof Lithuanians were very much in favour of us having these [NATO] forces.And there is a quite high percentage of Lithuanians thinking that these forces would help us to withstand Russian potential aggression," she said.

"So it's a very big reassurance for the people who constantly feel unsafe due to Russia,and now, also,Belarus."