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German-Dutch Corps to Lead NATO Land Forces in Estonia and Latvia

May 28 (Reuters) – A combined German-Dutch ⁠army ⁠corps will take command ⁠of NATO land forces in Estonia and ​Latvia later this year to strengthen the alliance’s eastern flank ‌against a potential Russian ‌attack, the countries said on Thursday.

The so-called 1 ⁠German-Netherlands Corps (1GNC), ⁠based in the German city of Muenster, will become ​a tactical headquarters for NATO in the region by mid-2026, with the alliance set to formalise the new structure ​this summer.

At present, NATO forces in all three Baltic nations ⁠as ⁠well as northern Poland ⁠come ​under the command of a single multinational headquarters in the ​Polish city of ⁠Szczecin.

A military official told Reuters this week that the change would allow NATO to bring in “mass at speed”, addressing the region’s limited strategic depth and vulnerability.

“The deployment ⁠of an additional tactical headquarters in the region strengthens coherence ⁠within NATO and contributes to Russia’s deterrence,” the German and Dutch ministries of defence said in a joint statement on Thursday.

Dutch Defence Minister Dilan Yeşilgoz said 1GNC had “thoroughly prepared” for its new role, citing a visit to the corps in March.

The move follows agreements reached at the 2025 NATO ⁠summit in The Hague and builds on the NATO Force Model introduced at the Vilnius summit in 2023, which aimed at deploying more forces within shorter ​response times.

(Reporting by Mathias de Rozario in ​Gdansk; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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