Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 14 – While most of
the world’s attention has been focused on Crimea and in a reminder that
Vladimir Putin does not see the NATO membership of the Baltic countries as an
impediment to the Kremlin’s muscle flexing, the Kremlin has in effect blocked
the work of Lithuania’s Klaipeda port.
Yesterday, Prime Minister Algirda
Butkavicius told the Lithuanian parliament that as a result of Russian actions,
it was now impossible to “export, re-export, or import” goods through Klaipeda,
the port which is a major link in that Baltic country’s economic lifeline both
east and west (ej.by/news/world/2014/03/13/rossiya_zablokirovala_klaypedskiy_port.html).
Butkavicius said that he had met
with Robertas Dargis, the head of the Lithuanian Confederation of
Industrialists, and various government officials. They confirmed to him that it
is “already” the case that “it is impossible” to move goods through any of the terminals
of the Klaipeda port.
If a Western company wants to send
goods through Lithuania to the Russian Federation or any other member of the
Moscow-led Customs Union, Russian officials will tell it that it must do so “through
other ports which do not belong to Lithuania [or] to certain other countries,”
according to Butkavicius.
This Russian action follows a decision
by the Lithuanian parliament yesterday to condemn Russian aggression against
Ukraine and Moscow’s occupation of part of the territory of a sovereign
country, to support the territorial integrity of Ukraine, and to express
Lithuania’s political solidarity with the new authorities in Kyiv.
The Seimas also declared that it
supports sanctions against the Russian Federation for its moves in Ukraine,
called for the signing of an EU association agreement with Ukraine as quickly
as possible, and supported moves toward the liberalization of the visa regime
between Ukraine and the European Union.
And members of the Lithuanian
parliament also called on the Lithuanian government to seek “the strengthening
of the permanent military presence of NATO in Lithuania, in particular in the
area of anti-aircraft defense.” They also called on the government to increase
defense spending to promote improve the country’s defense posture.
As Russian commentators today have
made clear, Moscow’s actions in Klaipeda are the Russian response and are
intended to show that any country, regardless of its alliance memberships, can
expect to suffer one way or another if it opposes Russia on Ukraine (rus-obr.ru/days/30101 and rubaltic.ru/article/ekonomika-i-biznes/bumerangom-provokatsii-protiv-rossii-priveli-k-sanktsiyam-protiv-litvy-14012014/).
Aleksandr Nosovich, one of their
number, observed that “the anti-Russian policy of the Lithuanian leadership has
not been without consequences” which like “a boomerang” have ended by hurting
Lithuanian business. He suggested that the Lithuanian business community should
be “grateful” to those Vilnius officials who have undermined Russian-Lithuanian
relations.
Moreover, he continued, “official
Vilnius with its messianic foreign policy and diplomacy” in recent years has
hurt not just business but the well-being of ordinary Lithuanians. That policy has now failed, Nosovich added,
and everyone should learn a lesson from what has taken place.
Although these Russian commentators
do not say so, what Moscow is doing in Klaipeda is not only an act of revenge
against Lithuania but a test of Western and especially NATO resolve. In the absence of a clear and forceful
response, more such testing of the alliance is unfortunately likely in the coming
days.
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