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Lithuania to increase military spending to counter Russian threat

Published 03/04/2015, 15:43
Updated 03/04/2015, 15:51
Lithuania to increase military spending to counter Russian threat

VILNIUS (Reuters) - Lithuania, spooked by Russian military assertiveness, outlined plans on Friday to raise defence spending by a third in 2016, contributing the highest share of its economy to defence since it joined NATO in 2004.

The Baltic country has never met the informal NATO rule of spending 2 percent of its economy on defence and curbed its defence budget during the 2009-2010 financial crisis. By 2013, Lithuania was spending just 0.8 percent of GDP on defence, the second smallest share of NATO countries after Luxemburg.

The attitude changed in 2014, however, when Russia took over the Crimea peninsula and backed separatists in eastern Ukraine. President Vladimir Putin denies sending troops and weapons to the region.

The Lithuanian Defence Council, a defence policy setting body, on Friday proposed raising military spending by 149 million euros (111 million pounds) in 2016, to 574 million euros, or about 1.46 percent of the economy, the Ministry of Defence told Reuters in an email.

Lithuania has already upped defence spending in 2014 and 2015, and its political parties have promised to reach the 2 percent of GDP goal no later than in 2020.

"This will get our army to a whole new level, it will be ready to ensure defence and deterrence, both in its own right and together with the allies," Defence Minister Juozas Olekas told reporters about the defence proposals.

The minister did not mention Russia by name on Friday, but Lithuania's leaders have frequently referred to the threat from its huge non-NATO neighbour and former Soviet master.

Lithuania has warily watched Russian military drills in the Kaliningrad enclave, which borders the country. A drill in December 2014 mobilised 9,000 soldiers and 55 naval ships to Kaliningrad.

If approved by parliament, the increased budget will be used to expand troop numbers and upgrade equipment, and for training with allies, Olekas said.

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