VILNIUS: Nato has held its first war games focused on defending the Suwalki Gap, a land corridor critical to the security of its Baltic allies, officials said on Monday, amid tensions with Russia.
The narrow stretch of the Polish-Lithuanian border is sandwiched between Russia’s highly militarised Kaliningrad exclave and Belarus, a close Kremlin ally.
Military strategists warn it is the Achilles’ heel of Nato’s eastern flank: its capture would cut off the alliance’s three Baltic members — Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — and so shatter its credibility. The gap, depending on the military analysis, varies from 60 to 100 kilometres.
Moscow has repeatedly denied any territorial ambitions and said a recent Nato build-up in the Baltic region on Russia’s border has upset the balance of power.