Romanian MPs voted 283-0 to support the construction, which comes "within the context of the Ukraine crisis" and "the aggressive actions of Russia in the region," according to Romanian President Klaus Iohannis, as cited by the Associated Press.
The facilities include a NATO Force Integration Unit and its Multinational Division South-East Headquarters, which will coordinate the alliance's military command in Romania and neighboring Bulgaria. The headquarters is expected to open in 2016 and will become fully operational by 2018.
For his part, US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter confirmed that NATO plans to build similar integration centers in Poland, Bulgaria and the Baltic states, such as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, where Ashton said heavy military equipment will be deployed in the near future.