The US and Nato have drawn up plans to defend the Baltic nations against Russia, latest US diplomatic cables disclosed by Wikileaks show.
The cables, published in the Guardian, reveal plans to expand an existing strategy to defend Poland to include Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
Wikileaks is releasing hundreds of diplomatic cables, angering the US.
Meanwhile, a warrant for the arrest of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has reached UK authorities.
Mr Assange, who is believed to be in hiding somewhere in England, is preparing to talk to British police, his lawyer said.
Mr Assange is wanted for questioning in Sweden in connection with rape allegations which he denies.
The Swiss post office’s bank, PostFinance, has also frozen his accounts.
The latest leaked documents show that in January this year, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton apparently signed a confidential cable saying allies in Nato had agreed to expand the contingency plan to defend Poland, to include the Baltic states.
The nine Nato divisions involved would be American, British, German and Polish, the Guardian says, citing information leaked to Polish newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza.
The cables say the military plans should not be discussed publicly as it might lead to an unnecessary increase in Nato-Russia tensions.
BBC World Affairs correspondent Peter Biles says the documents should be seen against the background of Washington’s efforts to “reset” its relations with Russia and improve co-operation.
One secret cable from the US mission to Nato in Brussels revealed that US Admiral James Stavridis, the alliance’s top commander in Europe, had proposed in January expanding Nato’s contingency plans for defending Poland – known as Eagle Guardian – to include Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia.
The cable adds: “The expansion was formally submitted to Allies for decision under a silence procedure.”
Call for secrecy
Another cable, signed by Mrs Clinton, instructs US embassies how to deal with the new Nato plan for the Baltic states, and stresses that the project must be kept secret.
“We see the expansion of Eagle Guardian as a step toward the possible expansion of Nato’s other existing country-specific contingency plans into regional plans,” it says.
Analysts say other cables show a degree of frustration between Warsaw and Washington over plans to deploy Patriot air defence missiles to Poland.
This had been the key price for a Polish decision to back the Bush administration’s wider missile defence plans.
But rather than getting operational systems with their full crews, the Poles received only launchers minus their missiles and a token number of US troops.
One senior Polish official is quoted in a cable from February 2009 as telling the Americans that his country expected to get operational missiles and not what he called “potted plants”.
Arrest warrant
Sources have told the BBC that the European Arrest Warrant for Mr Assange arrived on Monday afternoon.
Mr Assange’s UK lawyer, Mark Stephens, told the BBC: “We are in the process of making arrangements to meet with the police by consent in order to facilitate the taking of the question and answer that is needed.”
Sweden first issued an arrest warrant for Mr Assange on 18 November but it was invalidated by a procedural error. A new warrant was issued on 2 December.
PostFinance, in a statement on its website, said Mr Assange had “provided false information regarding his place of residence” during the account opening process.
“(Mr) Assange entered Geneva as his domicile. Upon inspection, this information was found to be incorrect.
“(Mr) Assange cannot provide proof of residence in Switzerland and thus does not meet the criteria for a customer relationship with PostFinance. For this reason, PostFinance is entitled to close his account.”
Wikileaks says it and Mr Assange have lost 100,000 euros in assets in a week.
In one of its most controversial leaks so far, Wikileaks released on Monday a US State Department cable from February 2009 asking its officials around the world to update a list of key sites, the loss of which “could critically impact” the US.
The list includes undersea cables, key communications, ports, mineral resources and firms of strategic importance in countries all over the world.
Former UK Foreign Secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind described Wikileaks’ actions as “verging on the criminal”.
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