Lithuania on Thursday signed a landmark deal to buy Norwegian anti-aircraft missile systems to plug an air defense gap on NATO's eastern flank, amid concerns over Russia.
The NASAMS medium-range air defense systems developed by Norway's Kongsberg will be the first such shield in the Baltic states and will cost 110 million euros ($130 million).
"There is no secret that we have had gaps in air defense until now. This is a new page in this area," Defense Minister Raimundas Karoblis told reporters.
He said the system will be fully operational within three years.
Lithuania and fellow Baltic states Latvia and Estonia boosted their defense after Moscow's 2014 annexation of the Crimean peninsula and the incursion of pro-Russian forces into eastern Ukraine.
Next year, the trio with a combined population of just over six million people is expected to be among only eight allies to meet a NATO target of having member states spend two percent of GDP on defense.
Local experts say Baltic forces alone would be incapable of resisting a full-scale attack brought on by Russian forces but their ability to fend off Moscow until NATO could scramble a broader response is decisive.
"This new system has a very important element of deterrence, meaning any aggressor cannot feel comfortable," Karoblis said.
Earlier this year, NATO deployed around 1,000 troops each in the three Baltic states and Poland while the U.S. temporarily sent a battery of Patriot long-range anti-aircraft missiles during war games to Lithuania for the first time.
Moscow denies any territorial ambitions and has long blamed Washington for ratcheting up tensions with a military buildup in its Soviet-era sphere of influence.
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