Baltics, in Russia's Shadow, Demand Tougher
Stance From West
Lara Jakes
March 7,
2022, 4:10 p.m. ETMarch 7, 2022
March 7,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/07/world/europe/baltics-russia-ukraine-war-blinken.html
VILNIUS,
Lithuania — Demanding assurances that the Baltic States will not become
Russia’s next battleground, Lithuania’s president firmly told America’s top
diplomat on Monday that warnings to deter Moscow from further aggressions are
“no longer enough.”
Hours
later, Latvia’s foreign minister dismally predicted that Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine would shatter any belief that the region could ever let down its guard
against President Vladimir V. Putin. “We have no illusions about Putin’s Russia
anymore,” Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics said. “I don’t see any good reason to assume Russia
might change its policy.”
Secretary
of State Antony J. Blinken is likely to get a similar earful on Tuesday in
Estonia as he tries to convince Baltic leaders, who are also part of NATO, that
the United States is doing all it can to stop Russia’s assault on Ukraine from
spreading across Europe — while remaining careful not to set off a wider war.
In a region
that borders Russia, and which all too well remembers the forced rule of the
Soviet Union, the Baltics are warily watching the crisis in Ukraine as a
bellwether for their own security. Ukrainian flags are hung from doorways and
draped from balconies across the capitals of Lithuania and Latvia.
Blue-and-yellow posters, lights and billboards broadcast the region’s support
for Ukraine. In Vilnius, the Lithuanian capital, a commuter bus had replaced
its digital route display on Monday with a message that read, simply, “Vilnius 🤍
Ukraina.”
In Riga,
the Latvian capital, Mr. Blinken said it was “very moving” to see the
outpouring of support for Ukraine in the Baltics, which he praised as a
longtime “democratic wall” against authoritarian rule.
But Baltic
leaders appear unsatisfied with the level of military support the United States
is providing to help deter Russian advances, either to Ukraine directly or to
its allies in Europe. Mr. Rinkevics also said international sanctions against
Mr. Putin’s allies could be toughened, and he called on European states to stop
the oil and gas imports from Russia that have become Moscow’s economic
lifeline.
Russia
provides 10 percent of the world’s oil and more than a third of the European
Union’s natural gas. Western sanctions are largely engineered to allow
companies in Europe to continue to buy Russian energy, and the White House has
resisted more aggressive penalties for fear that they would drive up the price
of gasoline and other energy costs for Americans.
Europe,
Baltic leaders told Mr. Blinken, has entered a new chapter.
“Unfortunately,
the worsening security situation through the Baltic region is of great concern
for all of us and around the world,” said President Gitanas Nauseda of
Lithuania. “Russia’s reckless aggression against Ukraine once again proves that
it is a long-term threat to European security, the security of our alliance, no
matter how the end of the war in Ukraine comes.”
He added:
“I must say that strengthening deterrence is no longer enough, and we need more
defense here in place. Otherwise, it will be too late here, Mr. Secretary.
Putin will not stop in Ukraine if he will not be stopped.”
Mr. Blinken
sought to reassure the officials that, as fellow members of NATO, the Baltic
States would be robustly defended should Russia try to move in.
Citing the NATO
collective defense pact that “an attack on one is an attack on all,” Mr.
Blinken said the United States and the rest of the military alliance “will
defend every, every inch of NATO territory should it come under attack.”
A
humanitarian crisis. Increasingly indiscriminate Russian shelling has trapped
and traumatized Ukrainian civilians, leaving tens of thousands without food,
water, power or heat in besieged cities of southern Ukraine and elsewhere.
A third
round of talks. Ukrainian and Russian delegations met for another negotiating
session and agreed to try again to open humanitarian corridors for civilians
leaving Ukrainian cities under attack, but made no progress on ending the war.
The key
cities. Russian artillery struck residential areas in Mykolaiv but Ukrainian
forces said they maintained control after another day of fierce fighting. In
Kyiv, a Ukrainian commander claimed that two Russian planes were shot down.
Here’s where the fighting stands in other cities.
Economic
fallout. Global stocks slid and energy prices jumped as U.S. officials in
Congress and the Biden administration weighed a ban on Russian oil imports that
could further punish President Vladimir V. Putin but exacerbate already-high
gas prices.
“There
should be no doubt about that on anyone’s mind,” Mr. Blinken said.
It was a
message he repeated throughout the day.
There are
already thousands of American troops in the Baltics, the majority of which were
sent in the face of Russia’s recent aggressions, and Mr. Blinken noted that the
Pentagon has sent F-35 fighter jets as it considers a more permanent presence
of U.S. forces to the region.
At the same
time, the United States and other NATO states have rushed more than 17,000
antitank weapons, including Javelin missiles, to Ukraine in an effort to help
the besieged country defend itself from Russia’s far more powerful military.
Mr. Blinken said an estimated 70 percent of assistance provided by the United
States is already in Ukraine’s hands.
Though
Ukraine’s leaders have pleaded for NATO to establish a no-fly zone over its
skies — a demand that the country’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, delivered
to Mr. Blinken this past weekend at Ukraine’s border with Poland — neither the
United States nor the rest of the military alliance is willing to take that
step, worried that it would escalate a conflict that has already created the
largest refugee crisis in Europe since World War II.
Mr. Blinken
also sidestepped a question on Monday as to whether Poland would provide its
fighter planes to Ukraine after being equipped with American F-16 jets,
although he said earlier this week that the deal was being considered.
Whether it
can go though quickly enough to stanch the bloodshed in Ukraine, where Russian
shelling has killed civilians and millions of people have been left homeless,
is not yet clear.
What is
more obvious is how heavily the casualties are weighing on the Baltics.
“We cannot
afford for Ukrainian cities to become another Srebrenica, Grozny, or Aleppo,”
said Gabrielius Landsbergis, Lithuania’s foreign minister.
Lara Jakes
is a diplomatic correspondent based in the Washington bureau. Over the past two
decades, she has reported and edited from more than 50 countries and covered
war and conflict in Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel, the West Bank and Northern
Ireland. @jakesNYT
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