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© U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Benjamin WisemanTwo A-10C Thunderbolt II aircraft pilots fly in formation during a training exercise March 16, 2010, at Moody Air Force, Ga. Members of the 74th Fighter Squadron performed surge operations to push its support function to the limit and simulate pilots’ wartime flying rates.
Combat teams, aircraft, tanks pulled from Europe

The Obama administration has removed all operational combat tanks from Europe and key strike aircraft, limiting the options for a show of force to bolster eastern NATO allies as Russia contemplates invading Ukraine.

Most analysts, and President Obama, say direct military aid to Kiev in the form of weapons, air power or ground troops is off the table.

That makes it a top priority to show Russian President Vladimir Putin that Washington stands militarily behind NATO members such as the Baltic states, Poland and other countries once under Soviet domination.

The problem is, the U.S. shelf is a bit bare. In the past two years, the Obama administration has deactivated the only two armored combat brigade teams in Europe equipped with the Army's main M1 battle tanks. It also disbanded a squadron of A-10 ground-attack jets that proved effective over Libya.

While Mr. Putin is flexing his muscle in the east, Washington is tilting military away from Europe and toward Asia.

"Everyone is moving west when we need to be looking east," said Luke Coffey, a former Army officer who was a defense adviser to Britain's conservative government.

"Ten thousand American troops have moved west out of Europe," said Mr. Coffey, an analyst at The Heritage Foundation. "Ten thousand British soldiers have moved west out of Germany, while thousands of Russian soldiers have moved west to the Ukraine."

On Wednesday, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen announced an increase in air policing missions over the Baltic member countries. More allied warships will be sent to the Baltic Sea and eastern Mediterranean, Mr. Fogh Rasmussen said.

Tensions reached new levels Tuesday as Ukraine launched its first military strike against pro-Russian militias that had gained control of an airport near the eastern border. Mr. Putin declared that Ukraine was on the brink of civil war, a statement that could be construed as pretext to invade.

Mr. Fogh Rasmussen accused Mr. Putin of fomenting the violence in Ukraine.

"We call on Russia to be part of the solution," he said. "To stop destabilizing Ukraine, pull back its troops from the borders and make clear it doesn't support the violent actions of well-armed militias of pro-Russian separatists."

Mr. Coffey said there are steps the White House can take. For example, it sent older aircraft - F-15 fighters - from England to Lithuania for policing missions.

"If we're going to take this threat seriously, why not send F-22s?" he said, referring to the Raptor, the Air Force's most modern ground-attack stealth fighter. "Why are we sending planes that had their heyday in the 1980s? The F-22 is the most advanced fighter plane we have in the inventory, and it would send a message to Russia that we mean business. It's not business as usual when you send F-22s."

The Pentagon also could send a team of non-combatants into Ukraine to assess the threat posed by Russian troops, armor and fighter aircraft massing near its border, Mr. Coffey said.

"There really aren't any military options," said James Russell, an instructor at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif. "The truth of the matter - the Russian army is there and ours isn't, and the Europeans have mostly disarmed, so you can forget about them. It isn't much more complicated than that."

Mr. Russell noted that Ukraine is not a NATO member, which would require the alliance to defend it.

Also, he said, "We have no vital interests at stake in Ukraine."
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© Manu BraboSoldiers of the Ukrainian Army sit atop combat vehicles as they are blocked by people on their way to the town of Kramatorsk on Wednesday, April 16, 2014.
He said the real option is to make Mr. Putin suffer. "Russia will pay a mounting political and economic cost to its thuggery, as Putin and his cronies expand their looting activities to what's left to steal in the Ukraine," Mr. Russell said.

Mr. Coffey said two Army combat teams remain in Europe: an airborne unit and a one mechanized with Stryker armored personnel carriers. The two tank brigades were deactivated in 2012 and 2013.

"For the first time in 70 years, there's not a single U.S. tank on European soil that can be used for combat operations," he said, adding that the Pentagon moved a few tanks back to the Continent for training purposes earlier this year.

The 67,000 U.S. troops in Europe are down from a Cold War peak of 400,000.

Mr. Coffey said a heavy brigade is designated for Europe and based at Fort Hood, Texas. It could be sent to Europe on a rotational basis as a show of force. With regard to air power, the U.S. has F-16s parked at Aviano, Italy, and F-15s at Lakenheath, England.

State Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki said Tuesday that "we're not actively considering military assistance," including nonlethal equipment such as body armor.

A defense industry source said Ukrainian officials have been in the U.S. shopping for small arms and communications gear - items the Obama administration is unwilling to provide.

"Certainly, there are requests that have come in from the Ukrainians, but our focus at this point remains on the economic and political support that we're providing to the Ukrainian government," the industry source said on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive issues freely.

The Pentagon provided 300,000 packaged meals, called MREs, in March.

"I'm pretty confident MREs won't stop the Russians," said Gary Schmitt, an analyst at the American Enterprise Institute.

The administration's steadfast opposition to any military aid rankles Sen. John McCain, Arizona Republican, who has said Mr. Obama does not realize that Mr. Putin still lives in the Cold War.

"We ought to at least, for God's sake, give them some weapons, light weapons with which to defend themselves," Mr. McCain said Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation."

He said the administration "won't even share some intelligence with the Ukrainian government. I can tell you from my conversations with people in the government, they feel abandoned by us, and rightfully so. This is shameful."

The Russian media reported that CIA Director John O. Brennan made a secret trip to Kiev last week in what is believed to be an offer of some intelligence on what the Russians are up to.