Paul Goble
Staunton, July 16 – The Russian foreign ministry says that Moscow is now finalizing plans to files suit in the International Criminal Court against Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania for their treatment of ethnic Russians. Baltic officials and experts say that there is no basis for such charges but warn that the case, even if ultimately unsuccessful, will have negative consequences.
Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Mariya Zakharova said the Russian government is ycompleting the pre-litigation phase and expects to file charges by the end of this year or the beginning of next (en.rebaltica.lv/2026/07/from-propaganda-to-the-courtroom-how-russia-is-building-a-legal-case-against-the-baltic-states/).
Baltic governments and academic experts say the charges Russia plans to bring are baseless but that the Russian case is of real concern to them because Moscow will use as a form of propaganda against the three Baltic countries and even to set the stage for a more major military move against them.
More immediately, there is the danger that the ICC will issue some temporary orders even if it ultimately rejects the Russian suit and the certainty that the case will drag on and be very expensive not only in terms of money but perhaps even more in terms of the reputation of these three countries.
This latest Russian use of lawfare against its opponents is intended to lead to demands within the Baltic countries that their governments not continue to support Ukraine; but what is most worrisome is that by presenting Russia’s claims in ostensibly legal language, many in the West will be taken in and reduce their support for the three.