Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 23 – The Soviet
Union disintegrated when Moscow attempted to hold the periphery and in the
first instance the illegally occupied Baltic countries by force alone, Vadiim
Shtepa says. And if the Russian Federation is foolish enough to invade the
Baltic countries now, it will share the Soviet Union’s fate.
Indeed, the Russian regionalist who
now lives in Tallinn says, “in this way, the Baltic countries which at one time
began the disintegration of the USSR will in a paradoxical way play a similar
historical role also for its ‘legal successor’” (spektr.press/rossiya-i-baltiya-kto-kogo-perepugaet/).
In an article yesterday entitled “Russia
and the Baltics: Who is Scaring Whom?” Shtepa writes that this month is the 25th
anniversary of Moscow’s efforts to hold the USSR together by using force in
Lithuania and Latvia, actions that had the unintended effect of accelerating
the demise of that country because few wanted to live in a state held together
by force alone.
As the world knows, “Lithuania,
Latvia and Estonia played a leading role in the liquidation of the Soviet
empire,” above all by insisting on the denunciation of the secret protocols of
the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact by which Stalin and Hitler divided up Eastern
Europe, Shtepa says.
“The democratic Russia of 1991
willingly recognized the independence of the Baltic countries,” he continues. “But
present-day Putin Russia has rapidly evolved in the direction of the former
Soviet imperial worldview. Now the president of the Russian Federation declares
that the disintegration of the USSR was ‘the greatest geopolitical catastrophe
of the 20th century.’”
Tragically, that has become “mainstream”
thinking in Moscow, with Putin and his supporters viewing “all the rest of the
post-Soviet countries not as really independent state but as some kind of
political misunderstanding which by accident” appeared on the map. “And if they
insist on their independence, Russia will begin to treat them in a hostile way
up to and including using military force against them” as in Georgia and
Ukraine.
The Baltic countries, however, by joining
NATO in 2004 “have turned out to be beyond reach” and “possibly therefore they generate
particular hostility among the restorers of empire” who know that they cannot
act against the three the way they have elsewhere lest Russia find itself in a
conflict with “the most important military alliance on the planet.”
But that hasn’t stopped Russian
commentators from talking about using force against Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania, Shtepa says. An MGIMO
military expert, for example, has suggested that Moscow should do just that if
NATO backs its member Turkey against Russia, something he says it could do
easily and quickly (svpressa.ru/war21/article/138968/).
It hasn’t prevented Vladimir Putin
from promulgating a new security doctrine which identifies NATO and of course
NATO countries like Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania as “potential enemies” of the
Russian Federation (rus.delfi.lv/news/daily/abroad/rossiya-oficialno-vklyuchila-nato-i-ssha-v-spisok-ugroz-bezopasnosti.d?id=46901963).
And it has not stopped the Russian
defense ministry from announcing the formation of new divisions in the west,
divisions that could be deployed at the Baltic countries, an action that
Russian commentators have suggested is simply a reasonable Moscow response to
NATO’s efforts to support its members (rbc.ru/politics/22/01/2016/56a1e4999a794761d2b7f9f5).
A few people in the West have been
intimidated by Moscow’s statements and actions, but they forget the facts of
history, the Russian regionalist says. “The Baltic countries sought to join
NATO precisely in order to secure themselves forever from possible repetition
of aggression by their eastern neighbor.”
Shtepa adds: “it is instructive that
today, 48 percent of the citizens of Ukraine support joining NATO, when only a
year ago the figure was 34 percent.”
Thus, in Ukraine as in the Baltic countries, Russian aggression has led
to a result opposite to what Moscow intends, to growing interest in the Western
alliance.
Unfortunately, Moscow does not
appear to have learned this lesson or to be constrained from doing the
unthinkable. Two years ago, a Russian
war against Ukraine “seemed improbably absurd but then it became a tragic
reality.” Consequently, one should not dismiss Russia rhetoric as “a simple
bluff” or as playing to a domestic audience.”
Moreover, Shtepa writes, “Russia in
the course of the [Ukrainian] war has used a plethora of technologies which it
is now customary to call ‘hybrid.’” And it is quite likely that any Russin
aggression against the Baltics would not at least at the beginning have the
form of “a direct military invasion.”
“For a Kremlin filled with nostalgia
for the USSR,” he concludes, “opposition to ‘the hostile West’ has been
transformed already into an end in itself,” and “in this artificially pumped up
atmosphere, it is impossible to exclude that some kind of tragic accident could
trigger” a real military clash between Russia and NATO in the Baltic countries.
But given what such an action would lead to for Russia itself in the first instance, it is thus worth asking who should be more afraid of such a move, those in Moscow possibly considering it or those Moscow thinks would be its only victims?
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