Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 3 -- US
President Barack Obama’s visit to Tallinn today comes almost exactly 75 years
after the United States and the three Baltic countries formed one of the most
remarkable alliances of the 20th century. (An Estonian translation
of this article appeared in Tallinn’s “Eesti Paevaleht” yesterday.)
That alliance, which for nearly 50 years
took the form of America’s non-recognition of the Soviet occupation of Estonia,
Latvia and Lithuania, provided not only the basis for the recovery by the
peoples of those three countries of the independent statehood but ensured that
having done so they would be integrated into the two key Western institutions
of today, the European Union and NATO.
Few people talk about the relations
between the US and the Baltic countries in that way, but it is a mistake not to
do so. Prior to Stalin’s occupation of
the three as a result of his alliance with Hitler enshrined in the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and its secret protocols, the relationship between
Washington, on the one hand, and Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, on the other,
was distinctly low key.
Estonia did not even open a legation in
the US capital – it had consulates in what were for it the more important
American ports of San Francisco and New York. And the United States legation in
Riga was famed not for its role in building a relationship with Estonians,
Latvians and Lithuanians but rather as “a listening post” directed against the
USSR and a training center for a brilliant pleiade of American Soviet
specialists including most prominently George Kennan.
But in the wake of the August 23,
1939, accord between Hitler and Stalin, all of that changed, and the
relationship between the United States and the Baltic countries became vastly
most important to both sides. Thanks to
the efforts of the Baltic American diasporas and the arguments of Loy Henderson
at the State Department, the US articulated its non-recognition policy.
And as
a result of this policy, the representations of the pre-war governments
continued to operate as representatives of the Baltic nations and thus to be an
inspiration for Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians that they would eventually
be able to recover their rightful place in the sun.
At no point between 1940 and 1991
did the United States or its representatives ever disown its declaration that
part of the territory Moscow viewed as its own was not a legitimate part of the
USSR despite enormous pressures from the Soviet government and the unfortunate
desires of some in the West to curry favor with that regime. In fact, even at the Helsinki Conference in
1975, US President Gerald Ford in a signing statement explicitly said that
nothing in the agreement affected Washington’s view on the status of Estonia,
Latvia and Lithuania, a declaration that infuriated the Brezhnev regime.
Since Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania
recovered their independence in 1991, the United States and the three of them
have moved if anything even closer together, not only because the Baltic states
like others who escaped from the Soviet bloc are more committed to an
Atlanticist vision of the future than are many in what some style as “the old
Europe” but also because the United States views its contribution to the Baltic
countries as one of the purest examples of principle rather than realpolitik in
its history, something that even the most “pragmatic” of American diplomatists
take pride in.
Given the increasingly authoritarian
approach of Vladimir Putin and his aggression in Ukraine, the alliance between
the United States, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania has once again been tested but
it has not been found wanting. President
Obama’s visit is a surety of that, and even if the American leader does not use
the term during his visit to Estonia, the American-Baltic alliance is very much
alive and well, something that is a source of hope and pride on both sides of
the Atlantic and a warning to those in Moscow who want to return to the past
that there are four countries which will continue to stand together against
that danger.
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