(Newsweek)
--- Earlier this month, a Russian warship entered Latvia ’s exclusive economic zone,
some Latvia ’s
Ministry of Defence, it was not an altogether unsurprising visit. Russian
military planes, meanwhile, have come close to Latvian airspace some 200 times
this year. Latvia ’s defence
minister Raimonds Vejonis tells Newsweek at his office in Riga , that his country is prepared should its
mighty neighbour to the east decide to invade: “We have special plans of
action. Working with the Ministry of Interior, we conduct exercises to train
our troops and policemen for different scenarios. But of course we need more
co-operation with our neighbours and our Nato allies as well.”
nine nautical miles from the country’s territorial waters. Considering
that Russian warships have already approached Latvian waters some 50 times this
year, according to figures from
Indeed, the Baltic
states, long accused of exaggerating Russian threats, now see themselves proven
right. “We Estonians didn’t think that the history ended two decades ago”, says
Sven Sakkov , Estonia ’s undersecretary of
defence. “The 2008 war in Georgia
was a wakeup call but most of Europe hit the
snooze button.” Sakkov calls the current situation in Europe “climate change,
not a case of bad weather”, and says Estonia had already responded to
the Russian threat by fast-tracking military procurement and asking Nato to
permanently base both troops and equipment in its soil. Ordinary Estonians are
responding to the situation, too, with the number of new recruits to the
voluntary Defence League doubling this year compared to last year. The Defence
League now has 14,545 part-time soldiers, equalling 1% of the country’s
population.
In the early 2000s,
Sweden
did conclude that history had ended and dramatically reduced its impressive
Cold War military. “It was decided that threats were so far off in the future
that we could take a strategic time-out and focus on developing high-tech
defence”, explains Bo Hugemark, a Swedish military historian and retired
colonel. In 2009, having decided to end conscription it further cut military
levels, to 6,000 full-time and 6,000 part-time troops. “Just focusing on
threats facing us rather than the region allowed is to take it easy behind the
Baltic-Finnish shield”, notes Hugemark. As a result, the Baltic
states ’ larger sister is now finding itself short of potentially
thousands of soldiers and sailors. “We know how to execute small tasks, not
fight a major enemy”, complains one young officer. Though catching an alien
submarine is rare, the fact that the suspected Russian sub spotted this autumn
managed to escape was an embarrassment to the Swedish military. In an ironic
twist, the development of a new anti-submarine grenade launcher system was
cancelled in 2007 following budget cuts. Earlier this month, the Swedish
military confirmed that a submarine “violated Swedish territorial waters”, a
fact Prime Minister Stefan Löfvén called “completely unacceptable”. The Prime
Minister has now initiated a security council that will advise him on threats
to Sweden .
Swedish Navy
fast-attack crafts are seen in the Stockholm Archipelago October 19 2014,
searching for what the military says is a foreign threat in the waters. Marko
Savala/TT News Agency /Reuters
Another
interpretation is, of course, that hawks are overdramatising Russia ’s
actions, labelling it aggression when it may be more harmless arrogance.
“Without this crisis those advocating defence cuts would have more power”, says
Rautasalo. And as far as Ivars Zarins, a leading MP for Harmony ,
Latvia ’s Russia-leaning
party, is concerned, “all the other parties talk about is Russia as a way
of diverting attention from their inability to deal with basic internal
issues.” In the October parliamentary election, largely fought over national
security issues, Harmony lost seven of its 31 seats in the Saeima but remains
the country’s largest party.
Added Zarins during
an interview at the Saeima: “Latvia
belongs to Nato and is member of euro zone. Saying that we face the same fate
as Ukraine
is like saying that we face World War Three.” But, he warns, like Ukraine
Latvia is divided, and like other Harmony politicians he accuses other parties
of alienating ethnic Russians and warning of Russian threats instead of focusing
on Latvia ’s
“real issues”. The ethnic Latvian Harmony legislator likens his country’s
treatment of its Russian minority to a husband neglecting his wife: “After a
while she takes a lover. Who’s to blame, the husband or the lover?” Instead,
argues Zarins , Latvia should focus on “poverty,
social inequality and education. We’re not investing enough in science and
innovation to make our economy more productive and jobs better paid, so people
are leaving the country for better opportunities elsewhere.”Russian Latvians
and Estonians do, in fact, watch pro-Russian. Earlier this month the Russian
channel Sputnik – named after the Soviet Union’s satellite that seemed to prove
the country’s superiority over the United States – was launched,
broadcasting in 30 languages including Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian and
Finnish. According to the Latvian government, Russian propaganda amounts to
information warfare, which it considers as serious as military threats. The
country has just allocated €800,000 to expand Latvian state television’s small
Russian service, and it plans to go farther, pushing for restrictions on
Russian “propaganda channels” operating from EU countries. “It’s not
intervening with free speech”, insists Vejonis. “It’s tackling propaganda, and
this is a matter for all EU countries since the propaganda is destabilising Europe .”
If the Baltic states appear increasingly alarmed over the
prospect of Russian aggression it’s because they have some experience of being
subjected to it. Today, however, Western-leaning neighbours of Russia face
better odds than in the past. “If Estonia is attacked, we’ll fight
like hell”, promises Sakkov. “The lessons we’ve learned from 1939 and 1940 are
that you have to fight whatever the odds, that you need allies, and that you have
to be a democracy.”
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