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Hello and welcome to the NATO update thread. I will be posting videos, photos, news, and history regarding NATO in this thread. All are welcome to participate!

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What is NATO?

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization also called the North Atlantic Alliance, is an intergovernmental military alliance based on the North Atlantic Treaty which was signed on 4 April 1949. The organization constitutes a system of collective defence whereby its member states agree to mutual defense in response to an attack by any external party. NATO's headquarters are located in Haren, Brussels, in which the always-American Supreme Allied Commander also resides.

NATO - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Who is in NATO?

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The following list includes all member countries and the date in which they joined NATO
  • BELGIUM (1949)
  • CANADA (1949)
  • DENMARK (1949)
  • FRANCE (1949)
  • ICELAND (1949)
  • ITALY (1949)
  • LUXEMBOURG (1949)
  • NETHERLANDS (1949)
  • NORWAY (1949)
  • PORTUGAL (1949)
  • THE UNITED KINGDOM (1949)
  • THE UNITED STATES (1949)
  • GREECE (1952)
  • TURKEY (1952)
  • GERMANY (1955)
  • SPAIN (1982)
  • CZECH REPUBLIC (1999)
  • HUNGARY (1999)
  • POLAND (1999)
  • BULGARIA (2004)
  • ESTONIA (2004)
  • LATVIA (2004)
  • LITHUANIA (2004)
  • ROMANIA (2004)
  • SLOVAKIA (2004)
  • SLOVENIA (2004)
  • ALBANIA (2009)
  • CROATIA (2009)
http://www.nato.int/nato-welcome/index.html
 
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Hello and welcome to the NATO update thread. I will be posting videos, photos, news, and history regarding NATO in this thread. All are welcome to participate!

View attachment 245940

What is NATO?

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization also called the North Atlantic Alliance, is an intergovernmental military alliance based on the North Atlantic Treaty which was signed on 4 April 1949. The organization constitutes a system of collective defence whereby its member states agree to mutual defense in response to an attack by any external party. NATO's headquarters are located in Haren, Brussels, in which the always-American Supreme Allied Commander also resides.

NATO - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Who is in NATO?

View attachment 245942

The following list includes all member countries and the date in which they joined NATO
  • BELGIUM (1949)
  • CANADA (1949)
  • DENMARK (1949)
  • FRANCE (1949)
  • ICELAND (1949)
  • ITALY (1949)
  • LUXEMBOURG (1949)
  • NETHERLANDS (1949)
  • NORWAY (1949)
  • PORTUGAL (1949)
  • THE UNITED KINGDOM (1949)
  • THE UNITED STATES (1949)
  • GREECE (1952)
  • TURKEY (1952)
  • GERMANY (1955)
  • SPAIN (1982)
  • CZECH REPUBLIC (1999)
  • HUNGARY (1999)
  • POLAND (1999)
  • BULGARIA (2004)
  • ESTONIA (2004)
  • LATVIA (2004)
  • LITHUANIA (2004)
  • ROMANIA (2004)
  • SLOVAKIA (2004)
  • SLOVENIA (2004)
  • ALBANIA (2009)
  • CROATIA (2009)
http://www.nato.int/nato-welcome/index.html

I'll contribute - pictures mainly (I hope that's ok) but do me one favor and leave Norway alone:

Nordic Defense News, pictures, videos and history

I'll handle that.

...

Supreme Allied Commander Transformation byggningen på Norfolk Naval Base

Supreme Allied Commander Transformation building at Norfolk Naval Base

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NATO assets in Germany

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A short history of NATO
NATO History

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\It is often said that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization was founded in response to the threat posed by the Soviet Union. This is only partially true. In fact, the Alliance’s creation was part of a broader effort to serve three purposes: deterring Soviet expansionism, forbidding the revival of nationalist militarism in Europe through a strong North American presence on the continent, and encouraging European political integration.

The aftermath of World War II saw much of Europe devastated in a way that is now difficult to envision. Approximately 36.5 million Europeans had died in the conflict, 19 million of them civilians. Refugee camps and rationing dominated daily life. In some areas, infant mortality rates were one in four. Millions of orphans wandered the burnt-out shells of former metropolises. In the German city of Hamburg alone, half a million people were homeless.

In addition, Communists aided by the Soviet Union were threatening elected governments across Europe. In February 1948, the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, with covert backing from the Soviet Union, overthrew the democratically elected government in that country. Then, in reaction to the democratic consolidation of West Germany, the Soviets blockaded Allied-controlled West Berlin in a bid to consolidate their hold on the German capital. The heroism of the Berlin Airlift provided future Allies with some solace, but privation remained a grave threat to freedom and stability.

Fortunately, by then the United States had turned its back on its traditional policy of diplomatic isolationism. Aid provided through the US-funded Marshall Plan and other means fostered a degree of economic stabilisation. European states still needed confidence in their security, however, before they would begin talking and trading with each other. Military cooperation, and the security it would bring, would have to develop in parallel with economic and political progress.

With this in mind, several Western European democracies came together to implement various projects for greater military cooperation and collective defence, including the creation of the Western Union in 1948, later to become the Western European Union in 1954. In the end, it was determined that only a truly transatlantic security agreement could deter Soviet aggression while simultaneously preventing the revival of European militarism and laying the groundwork for political integration.

With the benefit of aid and a security umbrella, political stability was gradually restored to Western Europe and the post-war economic miracle began. New Allies joined the Alliance: Greece and Turkey in 1952, and West Germany in 1955. European political integration took its first hesitant steps. In reaction to West Germany’s NATO accession, the Soviet Union and its Eastern European client states formed the Warsaw Pact in 1955. Europe settled into an uneasy stand-off, symbolized by the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961.

During this time, NATO adopted the strategic doctrine of "Massive Retaliation” – if the Soviet Union attacked, NATO would respond with nuclear weapons. The intended effect of this doctrine was to deter either side from risk-taking since any attack, however small, could have led to a full nuclear exchange. Simultaneously, "Massive Retaliation” allowed Alliance members to focus their energies on economic growth rather than on maintaining large conventional armies. The Alliance also took its first steps towards a political as well as a military role. Since the Alliance’s founding, the smaller Allies in particular had argued for greater non-military cooperation, and the Suez Crisis in the fall of 1956 laid bare the lack of political consultation that divided some members. In addition, the Soviet Union’s launch of the Sputnik satellite in 1956 shocked the Allies into greater scientific cooperation. A report delivered to the North Atlantic Council by the Foreign Ministers of Norway, Italy, and Canada – the “Three Wise Men” – recommended more robust consultation and scientific cooperation within the Alliance, and the report’s conclusions led, inter alia, to the establishment of the NATO Science Programme.

In the 1960s, this uneasy but stable status quo began to change. Cold War tensions re-ignited as Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev and US President John F. Kennedy narrowly avoided conflict in Cuba, and as American involvement in Vietnam escalated. Despite this unpropitious start, by decade’s end what had been primarily a defence-based organization came to embody a new phenomemon: détente, a relaxation of tensions between the Western and Eastern blocs driven by a grudging acceptance of the status quo.

During this decade, NATO and SHAPE unexpectedly moved to a new home. In March 1966, France announced its intention to withdraw from NATO’s integrated military command structure and requested the removal of all Allied headquarters from French territory. A new SHAPE Headquarters was established in Casteau, Belgium in March 1967, and NATO HQ moved to Brussels in October of the same year. Significantly, France remained within the Alliance and consistently emphasized its intention to stand together with its Allies in the event of hostilities. France also proved to be among the Alliance’s most valuable force contributors during later peacekeeping operations. Flexibility was always key to NATO’s success, and the French withdrawal from NATO’s integrated military command structure demonstrated that NATO, unlike the Warsaw Pact, could tolerate differing viewpoints between its members.

As a reminder of this point, in August 1968, the Soviet Union led an invasion of Czechoslovakia that put an end to a period of political liberalization in that country known as the Prague Spring. Like a similar invasion of Hungary in 1956 and military repression in Berlin in 1953, Soviet actions demonstrated what became known as the Brezhnev Doctrine: given the choice between short-term control of Eastern European client states and long-run political and economic reform, the Soviet Union would choose to maintain short-term control. The end of this policy would await a Soviet leader willing to choose long-run reform.

Détente had many faces. West German Chancellor Willy Brandt’sOstpolitik sought to encourage European stability through closer relations between Eastern and Western Europe. US President John F. Kennedy’s strategy of “Flexible Response” sought to replace Massive Retaliation’s absolute dichotomy of peace or total nuclear war. Adopted in the wake of the Cuban Missile Crisis, Flexible Response enhanced NATO’s conventional defence posture by offering military responses short of a full nuclear exchange in the event of conflict. Also during this time, a report entitled “The Future Tasks of the Alliance”, delivered in December 1967 to the North Atlantic Council by Belgian Foreign Minister Pierre Harmel, recommended that NATO should have a political track promoting dialogue and détente between NATO and Warsaw Pact countries. The role of NATO had become not merely to preserve the status quo, but to help change it.

The Harmel Report helped to lay the foundation for the convening of the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe in 1973. Two years later, the Conference led to the negotiation of the Helsinki Final Act. The Act bound its signatories – including the Soviet Union and members of the Warsaw Pact – to respect the fundamental freedom of their citizens, including the freedom of thought, conscience, religion or belief. Soviet rulers internally played down these clauses within the Act, attaching more importance to the Western recognition of the Soviet role in Eastern Europe. Eventually, however, the Soviets came to learn that they had bound themselves to powerful and potentially subversive ideas.

The 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Soviet deployment of SS-20 Saber ballistic missiles in Europe led to the suspension of détente. To counter the Soviet deployment, Allies made the “dual track” decision to deploy nuclear-capable Pershing II and ground-launched cruise missiles in Western Europe while continuing negotiations with the Soviets. The deployment was not scheduled to begin until 1983. In the meantime, the Allies hoped to achieve an arms control agreement that would eliminate the need for the weapons.

Lacking the hoped-for agreement with the Soviets, NATO members suffered internal discord when deployment began in 1983. Following the ascent of Mikhail Gorbachev as Soviet Premier in 1985, the United States and the Soviet Union signed the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty in 1987, eliminating all nuclear and ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with intermediate ranges. This is now regarded as an initial indication that the Cold War was coming to an end. The 1980s also saw the accession of NATO’s first new member since 1955. In 1982, a newly democratic Spain joined the transatlantic Alliance.

By the mid-1980s, most international observers believed that Soviet Communism had lost the intellectual battle with the West. Dissidents had dismantled the ideological supports of Communist regimes, a process aided in retrospect by the Soviet Union’s own ostensible adherence to human rights principles outlined by the Helsinki Final Act. By the late 1980s, the communist government of Poland found itself forced to negotiate with the formerly repressed independent trade union “Solidarity” and its leader, Lech Wałęsa. Soon other democratic activists in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union itself would begin to demand those very rights.

By this time, command economies in the Warsaw Pact were disintegrating. The Soviet Union was spending three times as much as the United States on defence with an economy that was one-third the size. Mikhail Gorbachev came to power with the intention of fundamentally reforming the communist system. When the East German regime began to collapse in 1989, the Soviet Union did not intervene, reversing the Brezhnev Doctrine. This time, the Soviets chose long-run reform over a short-run control that was increasingly beyond their capabilities, setting in motion a train of events that led to the break-up of the Warsaw Pact.

The fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989 seemed to proclaim a new era of open markets, democracy and peace, and Allies reacted with incredulous joy as emboldened demonstrators overthrew Eastern European Communist governments. But there were also frightening uncertainties. Would a united Germany be neutral? What would become of nuclear weapons in former Soviet republics? Would nationalism once again curse European politics? For NATO, the question was existential: was there any further need for the Atlantic Alliance?

NATO endured because while the Soviet Union was no more, the Alliance’s two other original if unspoken mandates still held: to deter the rise of militant nationalism and to provide the foundation of collective security that would encourage democratization and political integration in Europe. The definition of “Europe” had merely expanded eastward. Before the consolidation of peace and security could begin, however, one spectre haunting European politics remained to be exorcised. Since the Franco-Prussian War, Europe had struggled to come to terms with a united Germany at its heart. The incorporation of a re-unified Germany into the Alliance put this most ancient and destructive of dilemmas to rest.

In 1991 as in 1949, NATO was to be the foundation stone for a larger, pan-European security architecture. In December 1991, the Allies established the North Atlantic Cooperation Council, renamed the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council in 1997. This forum brought the Allies together with their Central European, Eastern European, and Central Asian neighbours for joint consultations. Many of these newly liberated countries – or Partners, as they were soon called – saw a relationship with NATO as fundamental to their own aspirations for stability, democracy, and European integration. Cooperation also extended southward. In 1994, the Alliance founded the Mediterranean Dialogue with six non-member Mediterranean countries: Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Mauritania, Morocco and Tunisia, with Algeria also joining in 2000. The Dialogue seeks to contribute to security and stability in the Mediterranean through better mutual understanding.

This fledgling cooperation was soon put to the test. The collapse of Communism had given way to the rise of nationalism and ethnic violence, particularly in the former Yugoslavia. At first, Allies hesitated to intervene in what was perceived as a Yugoslav civil war. Later the conflict came to be seen as a war of aggression and ethnic cleansing, and the Alliance decided to act. Initially, NATO offered its full support to United Nations efforts to end war crimes, including direct military action in the form of a naval embargo. Soon the enforcement of a no-fly zone led to airstrikes against heavy weapons violating UN resolutions. Finally, the Alliance carried out a nine-day air campaign in September 1995 that played a major role in ending the conflict. In December of that year, NATO deployed a UN-mandated, multinational force of 60 000 soldiers to help implement the Dayton Peace Agreement and to create the conditions for a self-sustaining peace. In 2004, NATO handed over this role to the European Union.

The Yugoslav conflict – and other contemporaneous conflicts in Nagorno-Karabakh, Georgia, and elsewhere – made clear that the post-Cold War power vacuum was a source of dangerous instability. Mechanisms for partnership had to be strengthened in a way that would allow non-NATO countries to cooperate with the Alliance to reform still-evolving democratic and military institutions and to relive their strategic isolation. As part of this evolving effort, Allies created the Partnership for Peace programme, or PfP, in 1994. The Partnership for Peace allowed non-NATO countries, or “Partners”, to share information with NATO Allies and to modernize their militaries in line with modern democratic standards. Partners were encouraged to choose their own level of involvement with the Alliance. The path to full membership would remain open to those who decided to pursue it.

This process reached an important milestone at the 1999 Washington Summit when three former Partners – Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary – took their seats as full Alliance members following their completion of a political and military reform programme. Through enlargement, NATO had played a crucial role in consolidating democracy and stabilty in Europe. Even before the new Allies joined NATO in Washington, however, a new crisis had already broken out.

By the end of 1998, over 300 000 Kosovar Albanians had fled their homes during conflict between Albanian separatists in Kosovo and Serbian military and police. Following the failure of intense international efforts to resolve the crisis, the Alliance conducted air strikes for 78 days and flew 38 000 sorties with the goal of allowing a multinational peacekeeping force to enter Kosovo and cease ethnic cleansing in the region. On 4 June 1999, NATO suspended its air campaign after confirming that a withdrawal of the Serbian army from Kosovo had begun, and the deployment of the NATO-led Kosovo Force (KFOR) followed shortly thereafter. Today, KFOR troops are still deployed in Kosovo to help maintain a safe and secure environment and freedom of movement for all citizens, irrespective of their ethnic origin.

NATO’s experiences in Bosnia and Kosovo demonstrated that the debate of whether NATO was to enforce a European peace was moot: events had forced the Alliance’s hand. Before the fall of the Berlin Wall, NATO had been a static organization whose mere existence was enough to deter the Soviet Union. Balkan intervention began the Alliance’s transformation into a more dynamic and responsive organization. Gone was the Cold War doctrine of nuclear retaliation, and in its place, the determination to use, after all peaceful means had failed, measured and carefully applied force in combination with diplomatic and humanitarian efforts to stop conflict, and to do so, if necessary out of NATO’s traditional North Atlantic sphere.

Accordingly, the Alliance adopted a new Strategic Concept describing the Alliance’s purpose and priorities. Most previous Strategic Concepts had been classified. In 1991, the Alliance had issued, for the first time, an unclassified Concept in the wake of the Soviet Union’s decline. The Concept that followed in 1999, stated that since the end of the Cold War, the world had come to face “complex new risks to Euro-Atlantic peace and security, including oppression, ethnic conflict, economic distress, the collapse of political order, and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.” These words would soon prove prescient.

The 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon demonstrated to the Allies that political disorder in distant parts of the globe could have terrible consequences at home. Substate actors – in this case, the al-Qaida terrorist group – had used Afghanistan as a base to export instability to the industrialized world, adopting hijacked airliners as improvised weapons of mass destruction to kill thousands of civilians. Subsequent attacks, including bombings of the Madrid commuter train system on 11 March 2004 and the public transport system in London on 7 July 2005, made clear that violent extremists were determined to target civilian populations.

In the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, a coalition of countries – including many NATO Allies – militarily intervened in Afghanistan in the fall of 2001. The goal of the mission, Operation Enduring Freedom, was to deny al-Qaida a base of operations and to detain as many al-Qaida leaders as possible. In December 2001, following the overthrow of the Taliban regime, UN Security Council Resolution 1386 authorized the deployment of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), a multilateral force in and around Kabul to help stabilize the country and create the conditions of a self-sustaining peace. In August 2003, NATO took over command and coordination of ISAF.

Meanwhile, NATO continued to accept new members and to build new partnerships. The NATO-Russia Council was established in 2002 so that individual NATO member states and Russia could work as equal partners on security issues of common interest. In 2004, the Alliance launched the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative as a way of offering practical bilateral security cooperation to countries of the broader Middle East region. Finally, subsequent rounds of enlargement brought more Allies into the fold – Romania, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Slovenia, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania in 2004, and Croatia and Albania in 2009.

In Afghanistan, as in Bosnia and Kosovo, Allies have found that military power is no longer enough to secure any tangible victory. Peacekeeping has become at least as difficult as peacemaking. During the Cold War years, Allied security had entailed the defence of the North Atlantic Allies; now the definition of “security” has radically expanded to include the individual’s freedom from the violent extremism bred by instability and nation-state failure. For instance, much of the world’s attention in 2011 was focused on the crisis in Libya where NATO played a crucial role in helping to protect civilians under attack from their own government. The level of violence used by the Libyan security forces against pro-democracy protestors was such that the international community agreed to take collective action. And it can be said that NATO’s operation helped end the Libyan crisis and give hope that reconstruction and reconciliation are possible.

Successful peacekeeping has come to entail not merely providing a baseline of security, but assisting in the construction of modernity itself. This task is beyond NATO, and the Allies know it. The Alliance is not and cannot be a civilian reconstruction agency, but NATO can make a significant contribution provided that it is part of a coherent international response. In this way, the Alliance’s efforts are only as effective as its ability to work with others, and NATO must liaise with countries and organizations that can provide resources and expertise in civilian reconstruction. To achieve a lasting peace in Kabul, Pristina, or Sarajevo, NATO needs the cooperation of other international organizations that can bring their superior reconstruction and civil-society-building capabilities to bear.

In the new Strategic Concept agreed in 2010, the Alliance committed itself to dealing with “all stages of a crisis – before, during and after” - an all-embracing principle that implies a greater role for cooperative security. This idea is at the heart of the “comprehensive approach”. Geopolitical instability demands complex remedies that combine military might, diplomacy, and post-conflict stabilization. Only the widest possible coalition of international actors can provide elements of all three. Accordingly, the Alliance is not only developing security partnerships with countries across the Mediterranean, the Gulf region, and even the Pacific area, but it is also reaching out to other fellow international organizations and non-governmental organizations that have mandates in such areas as institution-building, governance, development, and judiciary reform. For example, UN-NATO cooperation during the 2011 crisis in Libya demonstrated inter-institutional dialogue and coordination in key areas. During the operation, NATO also made unprecedented contacts with the Arab League, whose support for the overall international efforts was essential.

Since its founding in 1949, the transatlantic Alliance’s flexibility, embedded in its original Treaty, has allowed it to suit the different requirements of different times. In the 1950s, the Alliance was a purely defensive organization. In the 1960s, NATO became a political instrument for détente. In the 1990s, the Alliance was a tool for the stabilization of Eastern Europe and Central Asia through the incorporation of new Partners and Allies. Now NATO has a new mission: extending peace through the strategic projection of security.

This is not a mission of choice, but of necessity. The Allies neither invented nor desired it. Events themselves have forced this mission upon them. Nation-state failure and violent extremism may well be the defining threats of the first half of the 21st century. Only a vigorously coordinated international response can address them. This is our common challenge. As the foundation stone of transatlantic peace, NATO must be ready to meet it.
 
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The E-3A Component
NATO AWACS - Organizations

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The E-3A Component is one of two operational elements of the NATO Airborne Early Warning & Control Force. It is NATO’s first multinational operational flying unit, making it unique in military history. The Component’s mission is to provide aircraft and trained aircrews to deliver a surveillance and/or control platform whenever directed by the NATO Airborne Early Warning & Control Force Commander on behalf of the NATO commander, The Supreme Allied Commander, Europe (SACEUR).

The actual build-up of the E-3A Component started in January 1980; in October 1980 it was granted the status of a NATO International Military Headquarters by the NATO Defense Planning Committee (DPC). Flying operations began in February 1982 after delivery of the first E-3A aircraft. The Component was officially activated on 28 June 1982 and reached “Full Operational Capability” by the end of 1988.

The Component consists of five main functional areas: the Operations Wing, Logistics Wing, Training Wing, Information Technology Wing and Headquarters as well as other normal staff functions. Each of these major units is commanded by a colonel from a variety of NATO nations. The position of the Component commander alternates between a German and American Brigadier General. Overall integrated manning of the Component consists of 2900 multinational military and civilian personnel. This figure includes military and civilian personnel in support functions, such as base civil engineering, national support units and morale and welfare activities.

Seventeen E-3A aircraft are assigned to the Component. Normally, only a number of the E-3As are at NATO Air Base Geilenkirchen at any given time. The remainder deploys to the Component’s Forward Operating Bases in Aktion, Greece; Trapani, Italy; and Konya, Turkey and its Forward Operating Location at Ørland, Norway or other allied airfields. Each of the forward operating facilities is located on a national installation, although the Component has approximately 20 personnel at each site. They are NATO personnel assigned to the Component, but all are from the respective host nations.

Thirty multinational aircrews from 15 of NATO’s 28 nations are assigned to the Component’s three operational E-3A squadrons. The Training Wing has a flying squadron as well, the Aircrew Training Squadron.

Main Operating Base Geilenkirchen

Home of the NATO Airborne Early Warning & Control Force Command’s E-3A Component, NATO Air Base Geilenkirchen is located four kilometers west of Geilenkirchen, the Federal Republic of Germany, adjacent to the Netherlands border.

The Component’s Main Operating Base (MOB) was handed over to NATO from the host nation on 31 March 1982.

Surrounded by farmland and a natural woodland preserve, the base was originally built by the British Royal Air Force after World War II. Known as RAF Geilenkirchen (or Flugplatz Teveren by the local population), the British used the facilities as a fighter installation for various RAF fighter squadrons from May 1953 until January 1968.

Flying operations at Geilenkirchen ended in January 1968 and the installation was handed over to the German Air Force in March 1968. In August that same year, it became the home of the German Surface-to-Surface Missile Wing Number 2 equipped with Pershing missiles and supported by the U.S. Army’s 85th Field Artillery Detachment.

After the decision to make the base the E-3A Component MOB, a major construction programme began in 1980 to modify operational and support facilities to accommodate the E-3A unit. Since then, the majority of the buildings on base have been renovated to present day standards and numerous new buildings have been erected.

Major construction on base, that covers 620 hectares/1,530 acres, included a new 3,4 kilometer/10,000 feet runway that is 45 meters/150 feet wide, aprons and taxiways, a control tower, the Information Technology Wing building (which also houses the flight and mission simulator facilities), on base housing and major renovations to the four existing hangars.

In January 1980 the first Component personnel started arriving at the base. By the end of 1981, the German Pershing Wing had left the base and moved to Niederheid, north of Geilenkirchen while the U.S.Army’s 85th Detachment remained on base until being de-activated in July 1991.

History

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In the early 1970’s, studies directed by NATO’s major military commanders showed that an airborne early warning (AEW) radar system would significantly enhance the Alliance’s air defence capability. In December 1978, the Defence Planning Committee signed a memorandum of understanding to buy and operate a NATO-owned AEW system. By this decision, the member nations embarked on NATO’s largest commonly funded acquisition program.

The NATO Airborne Early Warning & Control Force (NAEW&CF) was established in January 1980, and granted full NATO Command headquarters status by the DPC on 17 October 1980. Force Command Headquarters is located with Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) in Mons, Belgium and is commanded either by a US Air Force or German Air Force Major General on a rotational basis. The Deputy Force Commander is always a RAF Air Commodore. Force Command reports directly to the Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR).

Today, NAEW&CF consists of two operational elements called Components:

  • First is the multinational NATO E-3A Component at Geilenkirchen, Germany, operating 17 Boeing NATO E-3A aircraft. The NATO E-3A squadrons are manned by integrated international crews from 16 nations (Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romenia, Spain, Turkey and the United States). The E-3As have been operating from the main operating base (MOB) at Geilenkirchen, since February 1982. Forward operating bases (FOBs) are located at Trapani, Italy; Aktion, Greece; and Konya, Turkey. There is also a Forward operating location (FOL) at Ørland, Norway.

  • Second is the Airborne Early Warning Squadron Number 8 of the British Royal Air Force (RAF) at Waddington (United Kingdom), with seven Boeing E-3D aircraft. The E-3D Component, is manned only by RAF personnel and its Main Operating Base is RAF Waddington in Lincolnshire, U.K.
The E-3A/D normally operates at an altitude of 30,000 feet. When established at this altitude a single E-3A/D can continuously survey the airspace within a radius of more than 400 km of the aircraft and, using digital data links, exchange information with ground and sea-based commanders. Thus, an E-3A/D positioned well within friendly airspace can provide early warning information on both low-flying and high altitude aircraft operating over the territory of a potential aggressor. While the Force’s principal role is air surveillance, it can also conduct tactical battle management functions such as support and control of friendly aircraft involved in offensive and defensive counter air operations, close air support, battlefield air interdiction, combat search and rescue, reconnaissance, tactical air transport and air to air refuelling missions.

The E-3A/D’s multi-mode radar is able to separate moving targets from ground clutter by use of the Doppler principle. Consequently the E-3A/D crews are able to detect and track low-flying aircraft and they are also capable of operating in the maritime mode, which enables the radar to detect and track ships.

The E-3A Component has been called on to support a wide range of operations. After the terror attacks of 11 September 2001, NATO invoked for the first time in its history the "mutual defense" clause spelled out in Article 5 of its founding charter. The Alliance therefore deployed its E-3A AWACS to the U.S. on Operation Eagle Assist to fly a variety of security support missions, freeing more U.S. AWACS to operate in Afghanistan. Less than two years later, responding to the threat posed by the war in Iraq, Turkey requested that NATO help augment defensive forces in the region. Deploying as part of Operation Crescent Guard, the E-3A provided additional surveillance support to that mission. At the end of 2009, NATO AWACS began to assist in NATO’s Operation Active Endeavour, a continuous operation monitoring the Mediterranean Sea for terrorism and piracy. At the start of 2011 NATO AWACS began Operation Afghan Assist, flying missions over Afghanistan in support of ISAF operations. Shortly afterwards, Operation Unified Protector was launched to enforce the no-fly-zone and arms embargo imposed on Libya, and to protect Libyan civilians. The Component also provides security support to important events like NATO Summits, heads of state visits throughout Europe, and more.

The Participating Nations

In December 1978, a small number of NATO nations joined together to establish this Early Warning and Control Program. This multinational force was created to provide an airborne surveillance warning and control capability that could immediately support NATO.

When the NATO E-3A Component commenced operations in 1982, twelve nations (Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, the Netherlands, Portugal, Turkey, and the United States) participated in the programme, providing financial support and personnel (Luxembourg does not contribute to organizational staffing).

In 1998, Spain joined the Component team, followed by Hungary in 2006, Poland in 2007, Romania and the Czech Republic in 2011. Canada withdrew its participation from the AWACS program in 2014. Other NATO member nations have expressed interest to join the Component in the near future.

Multinational and multicultural make the NATO E-3A Component a rarity among military units worlds wide. Service members and civilian employees from more than 16 supporting countries serve as a team to ensure Component’s mission is achieved around the clock.

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One of NATO's more interesting assets is its Submarine Rescue System - NSRS SRV 1:

The system will provide a rescue capability primarily to the partner nations of France, Norway and the UK but also to NATO and allied nations and to any submarine equipped with a suitable mating surface around its hatches.

He it is practicing with an Ula-Class submarine using British and Norwegian military personal

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Exercise Allied Spirit II strengthens NATO interoperability, relationships
Exercise Allied Spirit II strengthens NATO interoperability, relationships | Article | The United States Army

HOHENFELS, Germany (Aug. 12, 2015) -- More than 4,500 participants from eight nations are participating in Exercise Allied Spirit II, which is already underway, at the U.S. Army's Hohenfels Training Area in southeastern Germany.

Participating countries include Canada, the Czech Republic, Georgia, Hungary, Italy, Serbia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. This level of participation from so many multinational partners and allies here at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center, or JMRC, makes the exercise somewhat unique.

"Allied Spirit II … is the largest multinational exercise we've had here at JMRC probably within the last 10 years," said U.S. Army Maj. Kirk Daniels, planner, JMRC.

In addition to its size, Allied Spirit II, which runs from Aug. 4-24, is unique in terms of the command structure. In this exercise, the Czech Republic Army's 7th Mechanized Brigade commands the brigade headquarters for the first time in a NATO combined exercise. So while the U.S. Army's JMRC is in charge of planning the logistics of the exercise itself, the 7th Czech Brigade is in charge of executing the missions within the exercise.

"The Allied Spirit series is focused on allowing a multinational allied [or] partner brigade to serve as the mission command [element] for the exercise," Daniels said. "We want them to be the brigade headquarters because it forces the interoperability that we're trying to build."

"In addition, it develops more of a feel that's closer to NATO because as we're looking at supporting [operations] for a brigade from our allied nations, this helps establish that structure as well," he added.

Czech Col. Josef Kopecky, commander of the 7th Mechanized Brigade, spoke of the challenges that he expects to face throughout the exercise.

"This is the first time that a Czech brigade combat team will be comprised of elements from other nations," Kopecky said. "This is a challenge for us because of the language, because of the command and control systems and because of the communications systems, but this is necessary to do because being in NATO we should be interoperable."

Participating in multinational exercises at JMRC is hardly new to the Czech troops. Kopecky himself has been a part of several exercises here, so the area is not new to him or many of his soldiers. Their role this time around and the challenges that it presents are new, though.

In the past, the Czechs have sent smaller groups, but always belonged to a higher, or larger, unit and were issued the procedures they had to follow, he said. This time they are responsible for making the brigade work. That means they had to prepare themselves and their procedures before organizing the brigade. Keeping within NATO standards across language and operational barriers presented a challenge.

"That's the challenge for us," Kopecky said, "to set up conditions for everybody inside of the brigade to be on the same sheet of music, to understand each other, to work the same way and to be interoperable."

To overcome these challenges, Kopecky emphasized the benefits of training under the guidance and planning of JMRC, which takes care of most of the logistical support, from providing food and housing, to coordinating use of Multiple Integrated Laser Engagement System gear and training sites so that we can just focus on the training, he said.

"JMRC is the U.S.-led unit, which creates the conditions for such an exercise," Kopecky said. "A big advantage of this training site is that it has a great system of evaluation. They check, control, [give] advice, mentor and help us to successfully go through the exercise."

The respect that Kopecky has for JMRC is not a one-way street. Daniels said that the JMRC staff also holds the multinational training units in high regard.

"So far what I've seen, especially from the Czech Republic, is that they are a very professional, very driven organization," Daniels said. "Their staff is very thorough in planning and analysis. Sharing with them is pretty awesome."

"They were chosen because of their capability for integration and their willingness to build upon interoperability and we provide that opportunity," Daniels added. "Looking at the Czechs, they are a very strong entity."

In addition to the 7th Czech Mechanized Brigade and its subordinates being on the same sheet of music operationally, the JMRC staff and all the allies seem to be playing the same tune when it comes to defining mission success.

"Success in this situation is number one, a safe exercise," Daniels said. "Number two is a level of confidence for the brigade team. If the brigade staff feels like they were able to efficiently employ their forces with limited to no degrading, then ultimately we feel like we set the conditions for their ability to continue the relationship going forward."

"I think as well a success to us is that we've developed a foundation," Daniels continued. "The 7th Czech Brigade now has a relationship with the 1st Royal Irish, they now have a relationship with the [U.S. Army's 1st Squadron, 91st Cavalry Regiment] and now have a relationship with the Georgian battalion that, as the units decide to integrate and they decide to look at future training opportunities, they know that they have a partner to go ahead and reach out to."

The 7th Czech commander defined success in nearly the same way.

"During the planning process we created training objectives for each battalion within our brigade," Kopecky said. "We will try to reach those objectives. Also, success is ensuring interoperability with our NATO partners and allies."

This exercise gives us real-world experience working with other nations, he added, because we must really work through the language barriers and systems - integration challenges and we'll be able to call on that experience going forward.

A big key to achieving that success will be the willingness and drive on the part of each nations units to work together toward those collective goals. This is not a factor that any of them seems to see as an issue.

"I think [all the participants] are eager for the relationship establishment," Daniels said. "We realize that whether it's peacekeeping missions or combat operations it seems like we now focus on how we integrate NATO and U.N. forces collectively into standard missions across the board. We're setting the conditions so that now our units can link with our allies in NATO missions wherever they're sending them around the globe."

Kopecky was equally confident in the willingness and capabilities of not only his own Czech units but of all the units involved.

"I have to say we are a very good brigade," Kopecky said. "In the Czech environment with Czech troops and Czech units I am very confident that the brigade will meet all of the requirements it needs to meet."

"Here in the international environment with units from other nations it's more challenging for us," he added, "but as I have already talked to battalion commanders from other nations, they are eager to be here, happy to be inside of the Czech brigade and ready to do all that they can for us and this exercise so it gives me confidence that they brought themselves here with the mindset that they will do the proper things and they're ready for it. From the brigade mindset, we are not here to disturb that and we're not here to fail."
 

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