Friday, February 19, 2016

U.S. Continues To Store Heavy Military Equipment In Norwegian Caves

This 1997 aerial photograph shows the entrance to a cave facility the U.S. military uses in the Trondheim region of central Norway. (Defense Department photo courtesy of the National Archives)

CNN: U.S. stationing tanks and artillery in classified Norwegian caves


Washington (CNN)Marines are prepositioning battle tanks, artillery and logistics equipment inside Norwegian caves as the U.S. pushes to station equipment near the NATO-Russia frontier.

"Any gear that is forward-deployed both reduces cost and speeds up our ability to support operations in crisis, so we're able to fall in on gear that is ready-to-go and respond to whatever that crisis may be," Col. William Bentley, operations officer for the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, said in a statement Friday on the Norwegian deployment that called the caves classified.

The deployment of new equipment to the Cold War-era caves comes amid renewed tensions between NATO and Russia. Russia shares a 121.6-mile long border with Norway. The border was heavily militarized during the Cold War, and the Russian navy's Northern Fleet is in Murmansk, about 100 miles from the border.

Read more ....

Update: Cave-Dwellers: Inside the US Marine Corps Prepositioning Program-Norway (Defense News)

WNU Editor: This is actually old news .... A Look At The Massive U.S. Military Depots Built And Hidden In The Caves Of Norway (August 15, 2014).

1 comment:

Unknown said...

The Germans would have liked to have this type of enemy.

Capture it, throw a swastika on it and keep trucking.