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The Americans are coming....

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  • The Americans are coming....

    ....to Romania;

    MIHAIL KOGALNICEANU, Romania -- Camelia Mohorea stood outside the Vascov Nonstop shop with a big bottle of beer and a huge sack of pig feed, waiting for a ride home and daydreaming about American soldiers. "If the Americans come, they will give us a better life," said the 43-year-old woman, puffing...


    Romanians Eager for Long-Awaited Arrival of the Yanks

    By Kevin Sullivan
    Washington Post Foreign Service
    Monday, February 6, 2006; Page A10

    MIHAIL KOGALNICEANU, Romania -- Camelia Mohorea stood outside the Vascov Nonstop shop with a big bottle of beer and a huge sack of pig feed, waiting for a ride home and daydreaming about American soldiers. "If the Americans come, they will give us a better life," said the 43-year-old woman, puffing a cigarette as cart-pulling horses clomped by, hauling hay.

    U.S. soldiers have been the talk of this poor little town since last month, when U.S. and Romanian officials announced that the Romanian air force base here would soon host the first permanent U.S. military presence in a former Warsaw Pact country. From the presidential palace in Bucharest, 130 miles west of here, to the humble pig and chicken farms of this Black Sea hamlet, the announcement has been greeted with undisguised delight.

    "The dramatic wish of Romanians at the end of the Second World War was to be occupied by the Americans and not by the Russians," President Traian Basescu, a cheerful former oil tanker captain, said in an interview.

    Echoing a widely held sentiment here, Basescu said that while Romanians were looking west and waiting for U.S. troops as the war ended, the Soviets swept in from the east, bringing a half-century of communism that kept Romania poor and backward while Western Europe thrived.
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    The deal for the U.S. military presence here was signed in December by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Romanian Foreign Minister Mihai Razvan Ungureanu. Details are still being negotiated, but U.S. Army Col. Pat Mackin, a spokesman for the U.S. military in Europe, said troops could begin arriving by summer 2007. Mackin said the presence in Romania -- about 100 permanent headquarters staff members, and as many as 2,000 soldiers rotating through at any given time -- would be far smaller than at traditional U.S. bases in Europe.

    Mackin said the idea was to have smaller and "more agile" forces in strategic locations in Europe, where the United States is reducing its troop level from a Cold War presence of about 315,000 to as few as 65,000 over the next decade. A similar deal is being negotiated with neighboring Bulgaria, Mackin said.

    Basescu said Romania saw close military ties with the United States as critical to its own security, especially in the face of what he called the increasing traffic of drugs, arms and illegal immigrants across the Black Sea region into Europe. Military cooperation between the two countries has increased markedly since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the United States, he noted, adding that Romania's more than 800 troops in Iraq and nearly 600 in Afghanistan would remain in place as long as the United States and those countries wanted them.
    Dr. Mordrid
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    If US troops to be stadioned here behave like that murderer who killed Teo Peter and your government policy would be the same in dealing with such issues I would't be so sure on how welcomed yanks are here.
    Another issue is getting military equipment that integrates material based on depleted plutonium and getting our people to service it.
    A third issue is the concern for those bases to be used for torture and clandestine imprisonment operations, we just had that scandal last year and the EU (of which we're supposed to be members in 2007) is watching us.


    And I also wouln't go for what politicians say, ours tend to sell this country for a couple of scholarships abroad for their kids, and they don't care which ass they have to kiss for that.
    Ofcourse people in the region are happy about it, they think Americans are here to boost their regional economy and the politicians have to throw their PR b$ at us.

    We'll live and see, I just don't like beeing used as a thorn in Europe's side.
    Last edited by Admiral; 6 February 2006, 14:41.

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    • #3
      Hush, Admiral, Mordrid knows way much about this little province of yours than you - he's been American far longer than you!
      There's an Opera in my macbook.

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      • #4
        Well the article says Romanians, so there must be at least two who are eager to get the Americans there (both probably pimps)

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        • #5
          Originally posted by az
          Hush, Admiral, Mordrid knows way much about this little province of yours than you - he's been American far longer than you!
          snap!
          P.S. You've been Spanked!

          Comment


          • #6
            Ah well, as long as they try to keep from rapin' & pillaging it wouldn't be that bad...that area is (except for a couple of cities and resort towns) a pretty unproductive, archaic wasteland anyway, hence also the location of our nuclear power plant in the vicinity
            All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.

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