NATO minesweepers set off on Baltic deployment

April 22, 2014: The warships of the standing NATO Mine Counter-Measures Group ONE with, from front to back, Estonian minehunter Admiral Cowen, Dutch minehunter Makkum, Norwegian minesweeper Otra and Belgian minehunter Belis set sail from Kiel, Germany. (AP)

Crew members of Belgian minehunter Belis march towards their ship to set sail together with four other ships of the Netherlands, Norway and Estonia from Kiel, Germany, Tuesday, April 22, 2014. The warships are part of the standing NATO Mine Counter-Measures Group ONE, one of NATO’s four standing Maritime Forces, deploying to the Baltic Sea to enhance maritime security and readiness in the region. The maritime Group was reactivated by a North Atlantic Council decision to enhance collective defense and assurance measures in response to the crisis in Ukraine. (AP Photo/Gero Breloer) (The Associated Press)

Crew members of Norwegian minesweeper Otra stand on the bridge as they set sail together with Dutch minehunter Makkum, background, and three other ships of Belgium and Estonia from Kiel, Germany, Tuesday, April 22, 2014. The warships are part of the standing NATO Mine Counter-Measures Group ONE, one of NATO’s four standing Maritime Forces, deploying to the Baltic Sea to enhance maritime security and readiness in the region. The maritime Group was reactivated by a North Atlantic Council decision to enhance collective defense and assurance measures in response to the crisis in Ukraine. (AP Photo/Gero Breloer) (The Associated Press)

Five NATO mine-hunting ships set off Tuesday on a deployment in the Baltic Sea, part of the alliance's efforts to strengthen its presence in Europe's ex-communist east as members there worry about Russia's intentions in Ukraine.

The ships -- a minesweeper and a support ship from Norway and one mine-hunter each from the Netherlands, Belgium and Estonia -- left the German port of Kiel for an exercise that will continue under Norwegian command until the end of May. Germany will then take command of the deployment.

The ships will visit several Baltic ports and also participate in previously scheduled operations to dispose of ordinance from the two world wars.

Commodore Arian Minderhoud, the NATO Allied Maritime Command's deputy chief of staff for operations, said the exercise "is part of the whole package of ... actions to show NATO's resolve, to show NATO's preparedness."

NATO said last week it was strengthening its military footprint along its eastern border.

During a visit Tuesday to the Czech capital, Prague, Canada's foreign minister stressed his country's support for NATO's eastern members. "We will stand with you in the face of aggression," John Baird said after meeting his Czech counterpart.

Last week, Canada announced it would contribute six CF-18 jet fighters to a NATO air-policing mission to be based in Poland. Baird said in Prague: "we will be making other announcements of specific projects in the coming days."