Defending Czech airspace
Nato wants each of its members to be able to defend
against terrorists who use civilian aircraft as weapons.
At the same time, though, it wants the CR to improve its
ground forces instead of buying supersonic fighters. But
without the fighters, wonders Deputy Defense Minister
Štefan Füle, how can the army deal with a civilian plane
being used as a weapon? Petr Nečas of ODS says
subsonic L-159s could defend Czech airspace. Political
scientist Petr Robejšek wants a U.S. air base on the
Czech-Slovak border. Critics of these ideas say that the
L-159 is too slow to chase or shoot down a terrorist-
controlled plane and that it would take too long for a
supersonic jet from a U.S. base to get the necessary
approval. The Czech cabinet doesn't know what to do.
As the host of the Nato summit, it would ideally have an
answer before its allies arrive in Prague.
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