LONDON: Britain will send 20,000 armed forces personnel to one of Nato´s largest exercises since the Cold War, Defence Secretary Grant Shapps announced on Monday, warning of increasing threats to the Western-led alliance.
The deployment, which Shapps characterised as the UK´s biggest to Nato in four decades, is aimed at “providing vital reassurance” over the “menace” posed by Russian President Vladimir Putin following his invasion of Ukraine, Shapps said.
The British personnel -- from the Royal Air Force, Royal Navy and Army -- will deploy across Europe and beyond for the military alliance´s latest “Exercise Steadfast Defender”, alongside personnel from 31 other member countries and Sweden, which is a candidate to join the transatlantic alliance.
“Today´s Nato is bigger than ever but the challenges are bigger too,” Shapps said in a wide-ranging speech in London, in which he warned “the international rules-based order” was facing rising dangers.
“And that´s why the UK has committed... the totality of our air, land and maritime assets to Nato”, he went on. “In 2024 I am determined to do even more and that´s why I can announce today the UK will send in some 20,000 personnel to lead one of Nato´s largest deployments since the end of the Cold War.”