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Chapter 19
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The Challenges to Stability for NATO&#146;s <BR>
Northwestern Region
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
Lieutenant General Odd Vincent Skj&#248;stad<BR>
Chief of Staff, Allied Forces Northwestern Europe
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<BR>
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<BR>
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<FONT COLOR="#000000" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="7">I</FONT> feel both privileged and honored to have this opportunity to address
 the 16th NATO Workshop on behalf of my commander-in-chief, Sir John Cheshire.
 This is a grand venue, and seldom have I encountered such an impressive
 audience of politico-military competence. Previous speakers presented and
 discussed a number of crucial ACE-wide challenges to stability. I would
 like to focus on three particular challenges that cause some concern for
 us in the Northwestern Region.
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<B>A COMMON BORDER WITH RUSSIA</B>
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The first challenge stems from the fact that, geopolitically, Russia is
 the largest nation in our Area of Interest (AOI)&#151;you are well aware of
 the common border between Norway and Russia. From a Central or Southern
 European perspective, and with the current sharp focus on the Balkans,
 we are all keeping our attention on that 196-km common border in Finnmark
 Northern Norway. This border remains a major factor in the instability
 assessment made by my colleagues in Norway. For the same reasons, all our
 Partner nations in the Baltic are very sensitive to the importance that
 their individual and collective relationships with Russia have in the context
 of regional stability/instability.
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<B>NATO&#146;S INFLUENCE ON REGIONAL STABILITY</B>
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The second concern our region has is how much NATO in general, and my region
 in particular, can actually do to positively influence regional stability.
 Four possibilities that we believe might actually trigger instability in
 our AOI are:
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Bilateral border disputes
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Disturbances over minority rights
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Internal political instability
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Disputes over offshore resources.
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Potential triggers of this sort cause us the greatest concern because we
 have little influence over them and because they could trigger regional
 instability rapidly. Such instability, in turn, might result in a request
 by a long-standing Partner nation for NATO military assistance. In short,
 we might be unable to prevent a fuse from being lit, but we might be invited
 to help contain the ensuing explosion.
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<B>The Northwestern Region&#146;s Relationship with Russia</B>
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Because I am SACEUR&#146;s custodian of the defense guarantee in the Northwestern
 Region, I want to make three specific points about our relationship with
 the Russian military.
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First and foremost, Russia poses no military threat to the Northwestern
 Region.
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<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
We go to great lengths to ensure that the Russian military is fully aware
 of all PFP activities in our Region, why we are carrying these activities
 out, and who is involved. In early June, for instance, the &#147;in the spirit
 of PFP&#148; exercise &#147;Barents Peace&#148; was successfully completed in Finnmark.
 The Russians participated in the planning of this event.
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The inescapable fact remains that Russia retains sufficient military hardware
 in the LMD to make life very uncomfortable for any nation in the Northwestern
 Region.
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We like to think that our activities are regarded as transparent, militarily
 sensible, and in the best interests of regional stability. We have little
 doubt that we would be firmly told by the other party if they felt that
 the situation was otherwise. One recent example of a concrete confidence-building
 measure is the establishment of a direct &#147;hotline&#148; between Commander Armed
 Forces North Norway Vice Admiral Siorgen and Admiral Popov, who commands
 the Northern Fleet in Murmansk.
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<B>RUSSIA&#146;S NUCLEAR WEAPONS</B>
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The third and last challenge to stability that I would like to highlight
 is connected with the substantial number of Tactical Nuclear Weapons that
 Russia still retains in the Leningrad Military District. Although we are
 not at all concerned that Russia would contemplate using these weapons
 against the nations in our region, we do fear the consequences if one or
 more of these assets is stolen. In the hands of rogue extremists, the potential
 for triggering instability exists, and this is something we must be prepared
 to handle.
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<B>CONCLUDING REMARKS</B>
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These, then, are some of the issues that could trigger instability in the
 Northwestern Region. However, let me emphasize that none of them is a threat
 in the traditional definition of that term, but all of them <I>could</I> occur,
 and would do so almost certainly with little or no warning. The political
 and military consequences of NATO involvement in the aftermath of any such
 occurrences should not be underestimated.
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