Thousands of British troops are heading for a massive NATO exercise, Steadfast Dart, aimed to demonstrate the alliance’s ability to deploy rapidly in response to escalating tensions near Russia’s border.
Around 2,500 British personnel, alongside 730 vehicles, are moving across the continent by land, air, and sea to join nearly 10,000 NATO troops in Romania. Much of the exercise is taking place along Romania’s border with Ukraine, ahead of the third anniversary of Russia‘s invasion this Friday.
Steadfast Dart marks the first major deployment of NATO’s Allied Reaction Force (ARF), which succeeded the NATO Response Force last year. The wargames aim to test NATO’s ability to mobilise at speed under pressure.
Second Lieutenant Alex Coleman, speaking at a Hungarian military base in Szentes, described the exercise as a “hefty undertaking.” He said: “Steadfast Dart 25 is the NATO Allied Reaction Force’s first deployment exercise, and it is undoubtedly a significant operation. It involves an extensive road movement across Europe.
“Steadfast Dart highlights NATO’s and the British Army’s capability to transport large convoys across long distances to enable rapid deployment wherever required. Lessons have been learned along the way, but everything has come together effectively.”
British troops, including the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards and the 4th Battalion, The Royal Regiment of Scotland, are forming the core battlegroup. The two regiments, part of 7 Light Mechanised Brigade – The Desert Rats – are supported by additional UK forces and allied NATO troops.
The convoy, covering over 1,400 miles (2,300km), passed through the Netherlands, Germany, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, reaching Szentes early Tuesday. The troops are set to proceed to Romania later in the evening to conduct combat exercises.
The operation also involves hundreds of vehicles, including Foxhound patrol vehicles, Jackal high-mobility weapons platforms, and Mastiff armoured patrol vehicles, transported on ferries from Marchwood, Hampshire.
Armed Forces Minister Luke Pollard highlighted the UK’s leadership role in NATO, saying: “This Government is committed to ensuring the UK remains NATO’s leading European nation. Exercise Steadfast Dart underlines our unwavering commitment to the alliance and showcases the UK’s vital role within it.
“As we approach the three-year anniversary of Russia’s illegal full-scale invasion of Ukraine, strengthening our collective defences with allies is crucial to deterring President Putin.”
In November 1983, a NATO exercise called Operation Able Archer, simulating the escalation of a conflict to a nuclear exchange, significantly alarmed the then-Soviet leadership.
Coming as it did at the height of Cold War tensions, Soviet intelligence misinterpreted the exercise as a possible cover for an actual nuclear strike.
The Soviet Union responded by placing its forces on high alert, illustrating the precariousness of Cold War diplomacy and the profound risks posed by mutual distrust and miscommunication.