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19 May 2014

US missile cruiser to enter Black Sea amid NATO drills in Eastern Europe

USS Vella Gulf missile cruiser.(Reuters / Chip East)
The American missile cruiser Vella Gulf is expected to arrive in the Black Sea on May 23, a military source told the Russian news agency. It comes as part of a wider buildup of NATO forces close to Russian borders in the backdrop of the Ukraine crisis.

The Aegis guided missile cruiser will join two other NATO ships in the Black Sea in time for the Ukrainian presidential elections on May 25, a military-diplomatic source told Russia’s Itar-Tass news agency on Monday

“It is expected that Vella Gulf will pass through the Black Sea straits on May 23. According to available data, the ship will be performing the tasks of US Navy command in the eastern part of the Black Sea,” the source said.
The ship itself is 172 meters long and 16 meters wide and can carry two multipurpose helicopters. It is also equipped with an Aegis air and ballistic missile defensive system, Tomahawk cruise missiles, antisubmarine missiles, as well as Standard-2 and Standard-3 surface-to-air missiles.

Vella Gulf will have to leave the Black Sea no later than June 13 as, according to the Montreux Convention, non-riparian, military vessels are only allowed to stay in the region for 21 days. It will replace US warship USS Donald Cook which left the Black Sea at the end of April.

The Pentagon claimed that during the Donald Cook’s deployment it was subject to a number of fly-overs by a Russian Su-24 aircraft. The craft reportedly made 12 low passes over the ship during a period of 90 minutes, prompting a sharp reaction from the US who slammed the move as “provocative.”
Two crew members stand in front of the destroyer USS Donald Cook in the Black Sea port of Constanta April 14, 2014.(Reuters / Bogdan Cristel)

The Russian Foreign Ministry has previously accused NATO of violating the Montreux Convention, claiming the USS Taylor spent 11 more days than the limit in the region in February and March.

The expected deployment of the missile cruiser comes as NATO forces are beefing up their presence in Eastern Europe because of the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. Western leaders have accused Russia of purposely destabilizing its neighbor, something that the Russian government has categorically denied.

Last week, the #Ukraine’s coup-appointed government deployed 15,000 troops on its border with Russia, provoking a sharp rebuke from #Moscow which said Ukraine and NATO were not contributing to de-escalating the crisis in the region. Russia’s Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov said that Russian troops had been pulled back from the border zone.

However, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen insisted on Thursday that there had been no movement of Russian troops.

“I have very good vision but while we've noted Russia’s statement so far we haven't seen any - any - indication of troops pulling back,” Rasmussen said on his Twitter. “If we saw visible signs of a meaningful pullback by Russia troops, I'd be the first one to welcome it,” he added.
Elsewhere, in Eastern Europe #NATO has significantly increased its military presence and embarked on military drills. Earlier this month, the alliance began a 6,000-strong troop exercise called Spring Storm in Estonia.

Russia has condemned NATO’s activities and branded them as a provocation and not contributing to the normalization of the situation in Ukraine.
NATO started its Spring Storm drills in Estonia. The 6,000-troop exercise is the biggest since 2003 when Spring Storm was first held.
Source: RT

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