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Norway and US sign new defence deal Oslo, April 16 (AFP) Apr 16, 2021 Norway and the United States on Friday signed a defence agreement paving the way for the Pentagon to invest in military infrastructure in the Nordic country that shares a border with Russia. Washington and Oslo, which have had defence agreements for 70 years, also agreed on the conditions under which US troops can travel to Norway for regular training. A NATO member, Norway has refused to allow foreign countries to establish permanent military bases on its soil in peacetime in order to avoid provoking Russia. "This is not an agreement about planes or soldiers but an agreement that facilitates US military activities in Norway," Norwegian Foreign Minister Ine Eriksen Soreide said. "It's out of the question to open bases for foreign combat troops in Norway during peacetime," she told reporters. The deal gives the Pentagon the possibility to invest in infrastructure at four sites: the Rygge air base for fighter jets, the Sola base for in-flight refuelling, the Evenes base for maritime surveillance and the naval logistics base in Ramsund. It also outlines the terms and conditions for movements of US personnel, whose current visa exemptions will be extended to civilians, and grants US authorities precedence to handle any legal infractions among its personnel. "The agreement facilitates the US activities. There is nothing in the agreement that says there will be more or fewer (activities)," Defense Minister Frank Bakke-Jensen said. Norway already stocks pre-positioned US military materiel in tunnels dug into its mountains, and welcomes hundreds of US, British, German and Dutch soldiers on rotation throughout the year for exercises. This military presence irks Russia, with whom Norway shares a border in the Far North. While ties between the two are generally cordial, they have been strained since Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014.
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