Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 28 – In what
many are calling “the Putin effect,” countries across Eastern Europe, including
even Belarus, nominally Russia’s closest ally,
are now arming themselves even when they have to cut social welfare
spending because, in the words of one commentator, “no one wants to be the next
Ukraine.”
This sacrifice makes them producers
of security and not just consumers who rely on others, including NATO and the
United States, whatever some Western politicians may say; and it is an
indication of just how frightened they are that the Kremlin leader, however
bogged down he may be in Ukraine, appears to them as a continuing existential
threat.
Some of the increases these
countries are making in their defense structures are usefully surveyed today by
the Belsat news agency (belsat.eu/ru/news/effekt-putina-strany-vostochnoy-evropy-rashiryayut-armii-i-pokupayut-oruzhiye/).
Poland has done perhaps more than
anyone else, beefing up its territorial defense and increasing the size of its
military, including the development of a system of reserves modeled on the US
National Guard and plans to purchase new weapons systems in the coming years (poland.pl/politics/home/new-territorial-defence-force-poland/).
The Czech
Republic, Belsat says, has moved in “the very same direction,” approving a
security and foreign policy strategy based on the proposition that Russia is
now a major threat. It has increased defense spending, as has Slovakia for the
same reasons (defensenews.com/articles/e-europe-boosts-defense-spending-armament-programs-amid-russia-concern).
The three Baltic countries have
increased the size of their forces and their spending on defense. Estonia plans
to spend over the next four years more than Belarus does. Latvia is raising its defense spending to two
percent of GDP. And Lithuania is forming special forces and a trilateral force
with Poland and Ukraine. The
Scandinavian countries are also increasing their defense capacity and links
with NATO.
Estonia, Belarus and Ukraine have
retained the draft, and Latvia is thinking about restoring it in order to
guarantee a sufficiently large defense force. Finland has a draft, and Sweden
is now debating restoring obligatory military service.
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