Estonian President Toomas Ilves has called for a permanent Nato force to be stationed in his country.
Mr Ilves told the UK's Daily Telegraph newspaper
that Estonia felt threatened by Russian military flights and exercises
in the area, as well as by belligerent rhetoric from Moscow.
Currently the sole Nato contingent in Estonia is a 150-strong US infantry company, stationed temporarily.
Nato has pledged a 5,000-strong task force to defend vulnerable members.
According
to Nato's founding charter, if a member country of the alliance is
attacked every other member would be obliged to go to war in its
defence.
But the 1997 Nato-Russia Founding Act forbids the presence of permanent bases in eastern and central Europe.
'Four hours'
Mr
Ilves told the newspaper that it was time for Nato to recognise that
the security environment had changed since 1997 and that a brigade at
the very least should be stationed in Estonia.
"One hundred and
fifty soldiers is not a lot, so we do think that further stationing of
troops at a higher number is only reasonable," he said.
"We get
exercises [by Russia] that take place behind our borders that have
40,000 to 80,000 soldiers. Yet we are accused of escalating the
situation... and Russia says that it will have to take
counter-measures."
The Estonian president suggested that Russian
troops could reach the Estonian capital Tallinn - just 218km (135 miles)
from the Russian border at Narva - in just four hours.
Nato has
said that a 5,000-strong rapid response force, pledged at the alliance's
summit in Wales last September, could be deployed within 48 hours to
protect Eastern European members in the event of Russian aggression.
"It's a great idea but it probably is, in terms of the realities, just too late," said Mr Ilves.
Estonia has a standing army of just 5,300 troops and relies on Nato to police its airspace.
In early 2014 Nato quadrupled its policing mission over the Baltic states from four to 16 fighter jets, a tiny fraction of Russia's combat aircraft numbers.


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