Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 23 – Just as the
purpose of terror is to terrorize, the purpose of provocation is to provoke –
and if the targets of a provocation understand what the one engaging in it wants
to provoke, they will be in a much better position not only to prepare for it
but to avoid falling into the trap the provocateur hopes to set and to deny him
a victory.
Yesterday, Latvian Defense Minister
Raimonds Vejonis said that Moscow may carry out a provocation on Latvian
territory when Riga assumes the chairmanship of the EU Council given that the
Russian authorities carried out “a multiplicity of provocations” against
Lithuania when it assumed that position (regnum.ru/news/polit/1850004.html).
Unfortunately,
it is clear that Moscow is not going to wait that long in Latvia or in her
neighbors, Estonia and Lithuania. The
illegal seizure of an Estonian security officer by Russian security agencies,
actions by the Russian embassy in Riga to recruit militants, and the drumbeat
of articles against Lithuania among other things demonstrate that.
Moscow has three obvious purposes by
such actions. First, the Putin regime wants to promote fear among the governments
and peoples of the Baltic countries the Russian military is about to move and that
NATO will not be able or willing to respond to whatever Putin decides to do
whenever he decides to do it.
Second, it wants to promote defeatist
attitudes there, leading some in the three Baltic countries to conclude that
they cannot possibly resist a Russian move and therefore should try to make the
best deal they can with Moscow. Even if such people are not numerous, their
appearance will divide these countries and make a common defense more
difficult.
And third, the Russian government
wants to provoke some Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians into making the kind
of hyperbolic statements and taking the kind of actions that will isolate them
from the West and provide ammunition to those in Western capitals who argue
that no one should “die for Narva,” to use one phrase such people have already
put about.
To prevent the Kremlin leader from
gaining any success, what Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians need to do in
each case is obvious even if it will not be easy. The West’s response to Russian aggression in
Ukraine has been anything but impressive, but Western leaders do understand
that they have to defend NATO countries.
If they don’t, these leaders know,
the alliance will die: an alliance in which its members have lost confidence in
is like a religion in which people have ceased to believe. It no longer
exists. And if NATO ceases to exist, so
too does the West understood as the alliance of Western Europe and North
America.
Moreover, there is a great deal that
the three Baltic countries can do to prepare for their defense. While more should have been done earlier,
more can be done now. A confident build
up and thoughtful preparations for resisting Russian aggression are steps each
can and must take. If the three countries do so, Moscow will face a far greater
challenge.
Moreover, no one should allow
defeatist attitudes to go unchallenged.
A Russian “victory” over the Baltic countries is no certainty, and those
who act as if Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have no choice but to knuckle under
to Putin’s “new order” are wrong. They
need to be challenged and isolated.
Putin and his thuggish regime are
already overextended. The costs of Crimea and now southeastern Ukraine are
mounting. As the Ukrainians have proved by their heroic resistance, Moscow is
anything but an irresistible force. That
Russia is a big country with enormous resources is true; that it cannot fail to
win is not.
And finally, Estonians, Latvians and
Lithuanians must avoid the greatest danger of all – and the main goal of Putin’s
provocations. The Kremlin leader clearly
hopes that some in the three Baltic countries will say and do things that will
isolate them from the West and make NATO and its member countries as well as
their other friends less willing to act.
It is a near certainty that Russian
agents are even now encouraging through false flag operations some radical
nationalists in all three countries to speak against national minorities or
even act against them in ways that Moscow can count on Western media outlets to
cover and Western governments to distance themselves from Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania.
When one’s country is under threat,
such nationalist attitudes and actions are perhaps inevitable, but they are a
horrible mistake because they work against the very goals that the authors say
they seek and instead in almost all cases for the goals of the enemy they say
they are opposed to.
In short, as they face this latest
threat from Putin’s Russia, Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians must not allow
themselves to be provoked into doing what Moscow wants. Putin must be
denied that victory so that he will not have any chance of achieving any larger
ones.
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