Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 13 – Twenty-six
years ago today, Soviet forces acting under orders from Mikhail Gorbachev shot
and killed 14 Lithuanian demonstrators and wounded 600 others whose only “crime”
was seeking to recover de facto what
they had never lost de jure, their
state independence that Moscow stole from it by means of a criminal deal with
Adolf Hitler.
Sadly, on this anniversary, there
are still those in the Russian capital who claim absurdly that the Lithuanians
were killed by the Lithuanian independence movement and that Lithuania, despite
international law and the desire of the Lithuanian people, should be within a
Russian sphere of influence or even be part of a new Russian empire (svpressa.ru/society/article/164193/).
But Lithuanian
President Dalia Grybauskaitė speaking today said what Lithuanians felt than and
feel now: “We were all worried and literally glued to our TVs and radios and it
seemed that everything was at an end, that we did not know what would happen in
the next minute” (ru.delfi.lt/news/politics/prezident-litvy-nas-mozhno-vremenno-okkupirovat-no-pobedit-nelzya.d?id=73437714).
However, she
continued, “we knew then and we know now that defeating us is impossible. It is
possible to occupy us temporarily or to sometimes hurt us, but we cannot be
defeated.” That is “because each of us knew what freedom is, knew its price,”
and Lithuanians again and again throughout history have been prepared to defend
it.
Everyone must
remember, the Lithuanian leader continued, that freedom is “inviolable, that we
won it, and that it will always be ours.” And that has special meaning today because
of the link between freedom in general and media freedom in particular – after all,
the Lithuanians died at the Vilnius TV tower and at the radio and television headquarters.
Today, Grybauskaitė said, media
freedom must be defended “so that no one will be able to undermine it and so
that our people will know the truth.
Only under the banner of freedom could we defend our country” in 1991
and can we defend it in the future.
The Lithuanian
president is absolutely right about all of this; the only thing that is sad,
even tragic, is the renewed aggressiveness of Moscow under Vladimir Putin and
the doubts some have cast on the West’s commitment to defend Lithuania and
other NATO members make it necessary for her to reaffirm these things.
But her remarks underscore something
that the powerful often forget: however strong a state appears, it will not
last if it comes to be viewed by those it rules over as illegitimate. The
possession of the world’s second largest nuclear arsenal did not save the USSR,
and it won’t save Russia.
Instead, the Soviet Union was
defeated by peoples who recognized their rights and demanded that the powers that
be respect them or get out of the way. Russia today if it continues along the authoritarian,
even totalitarian course Vladimir Putin is pursuing will go the same way. It too
may have nuclear weapons; but it cannot hope to defeat peoples conscious of their
rights.
Those peoples, as Grybauskaite
reminds us, may be occupied for a time; but they can’t ultimately be defeated
either.
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