Paul
Goble
Staunton,
May 27 – Speaking in Bratislava yesterday, Lithuanian Foreign Minister Linas
Linkevicius said that “Molotov is alive and looking for a new Ribbentrop,” thus
suggesting Vladimir Putin now like Stalin in 1939 believes he can cut a deal with
someone in the West over Eastern Europe (facebook.com/konstantin.voneggert/posts/10154396329615780).
The possibility that the great
powers might make such a deal over the heads of the countries of Eastern Europe
has been a constant fear in many capitals, especially those who have as the
Baltic countries did earlier make as their fundamental demand “nothing about us
without us.”
And such concerns have only
intensified in recent months given the all-too-obvious desire of some new
leaders to save money by reducing their commitments to these countries and to
make money by reaching deals with the Russian Federation, fears that have not
been put to rest even by the introduction of NATO troops into some of them.
Putin is counting on that, on the
absence of ideological restrictions (which Stalin also ignored) and on the
increasingly short-time horizon of many Western leaders who want to ignore the
past and reach quick agreements that may benefit them politically in the short
term at home while harming others directly and immediately and themselves over
the longer haul.
The Lithuanian diplomat deserves
highest praise for describing what is going on in the most lapidary of
language.
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