The US is seeking domination over the Mediterranean Sea as tensions with Moscow mount. NATO and Russia have built-up their forces in the region to the most significant level in a generation.
Thibault Lavernhe, regional communication officer of the French army in the Mediterranean, said, “Ukraine has changed things. The Americans are back. This hasn’t been the case since the Cold War.” He added, “Russia has doubled, if not tripled, its military capacity in the area.”
The French military official estimates Russia has 20 ships in the Mediterranean. Lavernhe says the US has moved warships from the Atlantic Ocean to double its presence in the sea.
In addition to the massive naval presence, NATO has stepped up its intelligence gathering. The French Atlantique 2 spy planes are deployed to Crete to surveil the sea.
A NATO military officer speaking with AFP said the purpose of the deployment is “to show the Russians that the eastern Mediterranean is a NATO area.”
Russia Seeks “Full Control” of Southern Ukraine Along With Donbas, General Confirms
Following up on earlier pronouncements that Russia will ‘liberate’ the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, Russia’s military now says it aims to seize the whole of the south as well.
The New York Times has reported the Friday (April 22) statement of a Russian senior military commander, Gen. Rustam Minnekayev, as saying the aim is to take “full control of the Donbas and southern Ukraine.”
This was described as part of this newly launched “second phase” of Russia’s operation, which has lately appeared focused on completely securing the key southeast port city of Mariupol, which President Putin on Thursday had declared ‘liberated’—though telling his defense minister that there’s no need to infiltrate the cavernous Azovstal steel plant, where the last Ukrainian fighters remain, but to seal it off instead.
The Russian commander in the Friday statements confirmed that the military plans to establish a land corridor linking up Crimea and the Donbas. But the fight for Ukraine’s south figures heavily into this, according to Gen. Minnekayev:
And in a line that will be concerning to Chișinău, he is also reported to have said that control of Ukraine’s south will give Russia another gateway to Moldova’s breakaway region of .
“Control over the south of Ukraine is another way to Transnistria [alternatively, Transdniestria], where there is also evidence that the Russian-speaking population is being oppressed,” Tass quoted Minnekayev as saying at a meeting in Russia’s central Sverdlovsk region. This puts Odesa in the crosshairs, which is home to Ukraine’s navy, and which has so far largely escaped direct heavy attack.
Previously both Ukrainian and Western officials had accused Moscow of eyeing Moldova next as a possibility for invasion. The small landlocked country is currently hosting somewhere between 100,000 and 400,000 refugees.
As Axios notes, “Russian troops already occupy Transnistria, an unrecognized breakaway state internationally recognized as part of Moldova,” and it remains that, “Moldova is also 100% reliant on Russian gas.”