U.S. European Command
June 25, 2013
BALTOPS ’13 culminates at Kiel Week
By Lt.j.g. Loren M. Terry Expeditionary Strike Group TWO, Public Affairs
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“For 41 years, this exercise has provided EUCOM the interoperability necessary to continually improve and maintain security in the Baltic region and demonstrates our steadfast commitment to NATO.”
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USS Mount Whitney leads formation during Baltic Operations 2013
KIEL, Germany: Baltic Operations (BALTOPS) 2013, a multi-national forces exercise, drew to a close June 22 in Kiel, Germany.
In Kiel, BALTOPS’ events include a post exercise discussion; ship tours of the BALTOPS Maritime Force by local government officials, military members and the public; a reception aboard USS Mount Whitney (LCC 20); as well as participation in Kiel Week.
Kiel Week is a nine-day sailing festival. The event has a history of more than 200 years, attracts many world famous participants and draws more than 2,000 sail boats and 5,000 participants yearly.
“As a complement to a successful BALTOPS, we are able to participate in Kiel Week, which provides an exciting opportunity to continue developing and enjoying relationships with our coalition partners. Those relationships contribute to a successful BALTOPS and future military operations,” said Cmdr. Lance Lesher, acting afloat deputy commander, Expeditionary Strike Group 2.
Focusing on interoperability and team building, BALTOPS promotes and fosters maritime security and cooperation among regional partners.
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BALTOPS ’13 began in Ronne, Denmark and Ventspils, Latvia with pre-sail conferences followed by an at-sea phase that included exercises focused on maritime interdiction operations, mine countermeasures, undersea warfare and seamanship. This was followed by a wargame phase which placed participants in an asymmetrical threat environment, allowing them to showcase procedures, training and cooperative efforts honed during the exercise.
“BALTOPS allows participating nations to do combined training and learn from the experiences of the partner nations,” said Cmdr. Gerald Liebich, commanding officer of the German frigate FGS Brandenburg (F215). “The whole purpose of BALTOPS is the team spirit that joint exercises bring out; the Baltic Sea is an outstanding playground for this type of training.”
“The magnitude of BALTOPS provides a unique chance to expand military interoperability and to enhance and strengthen partnership not only among NATO members, but with regional neighbors alike,” said Lt.Cmdr. Egidijus Oleskevicius, commander, Task Unit .50.
With more than 40 multi-national surface and air units participating, BALTOPS ’13 also allowed for numerous opportunities to conduct cross-deck training.
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“No nation can confront today’s challenges alone,” said Lt.Col. David Bussel, director, Joint Training, Readiness and Exercises at U.S. European Command. “For 41 years, this exercise has provided EUCOM the interoperability necessary to continually improve and maintain security in the Baltic region and demonstrates our steadfast commitment to NATO.”
Regularly scheduled by Commander, U.S. European Command, BALTOPS ’13 was directed from aboard USS Mount Whitney by Rear Adm. Ann Phillips, commander, ESG 2, on behalf of Vice Adm. Frank Pandolfe, commander, U.S. 6th Fleet. Participating nations included Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, The Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, the United States and NATO.
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