Britain said today it hoped to get formal agreement on a proposal to create a small Nato rapid deployment force to defend mainland Europe and free up troops for Afghan duty at an alliance summit in April.
British Defence Secretary John Hutton presented the proposal at a meeting of Nato ministers in the Polish city of Krakow. He said it was aimed at reassuring Nato's East European members and encouraging Nato states to commit more forces to Afghanistan.
A spokeswoman for Mr Hutton said the idea had been "extremely warmly received" by ministers.
"I would go so far as to say we have a green light on it in terms of moving forward on the political level," she said.
The details would now be examined by Nato's Military Committee "with a view to a formal agreement in Strasbourg", the spokeswoman said, referring to a April Nato summit.
A Nato spokeswoman said alliance military chiefs would look at how the proposal fitted with the Nato Response Force (NRF), a rapid response force supposed to number 25,000 and able to be deployed in a variety of operations.
The NRF exists largely on paper at the moment as alliance members could not agree on what role it should play.
Mr Hutton was quoted in yesterday's Financial Times as saying the proposal would help break deadlock in Nato over the NRF.
He said he hoped it would reassure N's newer, former communist Eastern European members, particular the Baltic atostates, which were alarmed by Russia's incursion into Georgia last year and free up troops for Afghanistan.
"I hope it might make it easier for Nato to do more in Afghanistan, certain in the knowledge that there is a dedicated homeland security force that will have no other call on its priorities than European homeland security," Hutton was quoted as telling the paper.
After the Cold War ended, Nato moved away from a policy of maintaining large standing forces to defend alliance territory.
Britain says its proposed Allied Solidarity Force would have 1,500 troops ready for deployment and 1,500 in training.
Nato's European members are under pressure from the United States to boost commitments to the troubled international operations in Afghanistan after president Barack Obama announced plans to boost US troop numbers there by 17,000.
Reuters