Tag: NATO Multinational Division

  • December 1, 2015 UPDATE

    December 1, 2015 UPDATE

    Over 2,600 troops and
    military specialists, with 360 technical devices, paraded in Bucharest on
    December 1st, Romania’s National Day. As a first, the parade was joined by a
    detachment from the theater of operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Some of the
    attractions of the parade were the armored vehicles, the Hercules and Spartan
    fighters and the helicopters. Also, this year the traditional parade of the
    Romanian army was joined by troops from the Republic of Moldova, Bulgaria, the
    US, Poland and Turkey. Romania’s national day was celebrated not only in
    Bucharest, but everywhere in the country, and also at the Romanian diplomatic
    missions around the world, through concerts, exhibitions, film screenings and
    receptions. December 1st became Romania’s National Day after the anti-communist
    Revolution of 1989, and marks the completion in 1918 of the process of setting
    up the Romanian unitary state, by aggregating under Bucharest’s authority all
    the provinces with predominantly Romanian-speaking populations from the neighboring
    multi-national empires.






    This year’s December 1st
    could mark a new beginning for Romania, with regard to its common practices,
    behaviors and mentalities, said in a message to Romanians President Klaus Iohannis, who also stressed
    the fact that a new beginning was necessary in Romanian politics. According to
    the Romanian head of state, a new beginning would entail new ideas, new
    approaches and new behaviors, while at the same time maintaining the stability
    and balance of the Romanian political system. December 1st is not
    just a celebration of the past, it’s an opportunity for Romania to focus more
    on the present, on its place in Europe and the world, Iohannis went on saying.
    In a world in which war and terror seem to have gained significant ground,
    Romania is a provider of certainty and predictability, thanks to its democratic
    values and its solid partnerships within the EU and NATO, the president also
    said in his message. After the parade, Iohannis had a videoconference with the
    soldiers deployed in theatres of operations abroad and attended several
    ceremonies devoted to Romania’s National Day. Prime Minister Dacian Ciolos too
    sent a message to all Romanians, both in the country and abroad, urging them to
    join efforts and help make Romania a better country, a country ruled on the
    basis of such principles as decency and transparency.




    The US Secretary of State,
    John Kerry, congratulated the Romanian people, on behalf of President Barack
    Obama, on their National Day, pleading at the same time for even tighter
    relations between Romania and the US. In a communiqué issued by the US
    Department of State, John Kerry recalls that 2015 marks the celebration of 135
    years since the beginning of diplomatic relations between the US and Romania,
    countries united by a friendship built on their joint commitment to promoting
    democracy and the rule of law, to ensuring citizens’ prosperity, through solid
    trading relations and investments, as well as to securing a free and united
    Europe. The US Secretary of State has stated that the US is proud its soldiers
    have participated in missions alongside their Romanian mates, driven by the
    same goal of defending freedom and justice in various parts of the world.




















    Romanian
    Foreign Minister Lazar Comanescu attended in Brussels on Tuesday the Resolute
    Support meeting, organized as part of the summit of the NATO Foreign
    Ministers. The participants discussed security in Afghanistan, NATO’ s support to
    the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces and means of carrying on NATO’s commitment
    to Afghanistan. The importance of NATO’s cooperation with other international
    organizations, the UN and the EU in particular, was also stressed at the
    meeting. On the sidelines of the event, Lazar Comanescu had a meeting with his
    Polish counterpart Witold Waszczykowski.














    The Command unit of the NATO
    Multinational Division Southeast was officially activated in Bucharest on
    Tuesday. The setting up of this NATO control structure follows the activation
    in September of the NATO Force Integration Unit. The two structures will ensure
    a visible and consistent NATO presence in Romania and will play a key-role in
    ensuring the connection between the national and the allied forces. In another
    move, the Pentagon has announced that some 70 US military pieces of equipment
    arrived in Romania on Tuesday, from Germany. Other pieces will be shipped in
    late December to Bulgaria and Lithuania. Early this year, during a visit to
    Estonia, the US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter announced that the US would
    temporary station vehicles and pieces of equipment in Central and Eastern
    Europe, sufficient to support an armored brigade. Their deployment would
    facilitate the rotation of the US forces in the region and their participation
    in exercises and training missions.








    On Tuesday, the Royal Train took a
    symbolical trip along the Drobeta -Turnu Severin – Bucharest route, as did King
    Carol 1st of Romania 150 years ago. The train passed through the
    counties of Mehedinti, Dolj, Olt and Dambovita, and thousands of people saluted
    Princess Margareta, Princes Maria and Prince Radu, who were on the train. On
    May 8th, 1866, Carol stepped for the first time on Romanian soil in
    Turnu Severin. On the 10th of May he entered Bucharest and the
    Romanian Constitution was adopted on June 29th. The Royal Train,
    made in Italy, started serving the Royal House of Romania in 1928, during the
    first reign of Mihai 1st. It was used by both King Carol 2nd
    and Mihai 1st, and during the communist period it was used as a
    presidential train.