(Fox News) --- Russia reportedly has made a new threat to begin
"destabilizing actions" in the Baltic republics of Estonia , Latvia ,
and Lithuania
if NATO moved more forces into those countries.
If the Russian
threat is carried out, it could represent the greatest challenge to the
28-member military alliance's doctrine of mutual self-defense since its
founding in 1949. Estonia ,
Latvia , and Lithuania
joined NATO simultaneously in 2004.
Western security
officials say that the possible actions Moscow
could be planning include cyberattacks or civil disturbances involving ethnic
Russians in all three countries. Similar demonstrations were reported
ahead of the Russian annexation of Crimea from Ukraine last year.
The Times reported
that Russia warned that
"the same conditions that existed in Ukraine
and caused Russia
to take action there" exist in the Baltic republics. However, the Times
reported that the note suggested that Russia would not "[inject]
troops and heavy weapons" into the region," but would favor
"other tools."
The note adds that Russia would "hope slowly to entice those
Russian populations towards Russia
without giving Nato a pretext to deploy troops."
If NATO does
respond to Russian activity in the region, the document says, Moscow
would consider it to be "a potential co-aggressor against Russian-speaking
minorities in Baltic states ."
Western officials
have been concerned that Russian president Vladimir Putin would attempt to
bring the Baltics closer to Moscow's sphere of influence since the annexation
of Crimea. Last month, a convoy of U.S.
troops crisscrossed Eastern Europe in an
effort to reassure allies.
The convoy was
greeted warmly in the Baltics as well as in Poland
and the Czech Republic , despite threats to block its
path by pro-Russian activists on Facebook and in the media.
In January, NATO
decided to set up command-and-control centers in Latvia ,
Estonia , Lithuania , Poland ,
Romania and Bulgaria by the
end of 2016.
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