HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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[As they did 60 years ago in Europe's previous
continent-wide military expansion 'alliance.']

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
March 16, 2002

Baltics: Defense Ministers Say They're Small But Could
Pack Powerful NATO Punch
By Jeffrey Donovan
It is widely believed the three Baltic countries have
a very good chance of being admitted into NATO during
the next round of alliance enlargement in November,
but the defense ministers of Estonia, Latvia, and
Lithuania are taking nothing for granted. As RFE/RL
correspondent Jeffrey Donovan reports, the three
ministers are lobbying hard for NATO membership during
a trip to Washington this week. 
Washington, 15 March 2002 (RFE/RL) -- The defense
ministers of the three Baltic nations are pressing
their case for NATO membership in Washington this
week, vowing to make serious military contributions to
the trans-Atlantic alliance.
NATO is expected to bring in several new members from
the former Soviet bloc at a summit in Prague in
November. U.S. President George W. Bush has vowed to
support candidates that make efforts to contribute
militarily to NATO. Defense Ministers Girts Valdis
Kristovskis of Latvia, Linas Linkevicius of Lithuania,
and Sven Mikser of Estonia tried to prove to their
U.S. hosts this week that their countries are doing
just that.
The Baltic nations are considered by some to be
shoe-ins for NATO membership, a fact that may explain
a slip of the tongue by Kristovskis. During an address
to a forum in Washington yesterday, Latvia's defense
minister at one point said Riga is a NATO "member,"
but then corrected that to "candidate."
No one in the audience appeared to notice the slip,
but everyone seemed to understand the ministers' main
message -- that their countries have made great
strides in preparing for NATO membership, will
continue to do so after joining, and will bring
non-military assets to the alliance, as well.
Estonia's Mikser summed up the Baltics' message:
"Today, we are looking toward the Prague summit, and
we are definitely aware of how much work lies beyond
Prague. So this is not a process that will end in
Prague. And we believe that our countries are ready to
contribute, ready to participate, and we believe that
NATO is also ready to make this year a truly historic
year, not only for a small group of East and Central
European countries, but for global security."
All three ministers say their countries have made
military improvements to be ready to contribute to
NATO. They also thanked Washington for its support
during the Cold War -- when the U.S. did not recognize
the incorporation of the Baltic countries into the
Soviet Union -- and after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
They say that, because of their lack of financial
resources and small size, with a combined population
of about eight million, their countries have made a
strategic choice to specialize their military forces
in key areas. They have also elected to spend 2
percent of their gross domestic products on the
military, a decision praised yesterday by the U.S.
State Department.
Mikser says Estonia is focusing on air surveillance
and naval mine countermeasures. He says Riga recently
signed a deal to buy a three-dimensional radar system
from the U.S. firm Lockheed Martin that will serve to
upgrade its air surveillance system. And he added that
Estonia, like the other Baltic countries, has agreed
to send troops to accompany a Danish unit to
Kyrgyzstan, where they will support the antiterrorism
effort.
All three countries have been taking part in NATO
peacekeeping operations, often beside Danish troops,
since the early 1990s. Mikser says:
"Since 1994, we have actually participated with
approximately 900 Estonian troops in operations in
Kosovo, in Bosnia, and elsewhere. This figure might
not seem particularly big, but when you consider that
per capita we actually send almost the highest number
of people to participate in these operations of all
countries in the world, then it's quite significant."
Lithuania's Linkevicius also says Vilnius is focusing,
among other areas, on air surveillance. He added that
all three countries are ready to share data and visual
imagery with their NATO allies once a decision on
membership is made.
Linkevicius says Lithuania recently became the first
European country to decide to buy special antitank
weaponry and is also close to buying Stinger
anti-aircraft missile technology. He says Vilnius is
set to help NATO defend member countries under Article
5, the part of the alliance's founding charter that
states that an attack on one member is considered an
attack against all NATO countries.
NATO invoked Article 5 for the first time in its
52-year history in early October after the 11
September terrorist attacks on the U.S. Linkevicius
says:
"In Lithuania, we agreed, and it was agreed with a
NATO team that visited Lithuania quite recently, to
prepare a battalion-sized unit ready for Article 5
operations by the end of this year. Quite soon, it
will be ready by all means -- weapons systems,
communications, whatever. That unit, we believe, could
take part in future operations."
The ministers say their nations also have a lot to
offer NATO that is not strictly military in nature.
With a geographically strategic location between the
Baltic Sea, the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad,
Russia, and Belarus, the ministers say their countries
have already started to play a key role in spreading
Western, democratic values in the region.
Linkevicius says he sees the Baltics playing a vital
role in the economic development of Kaliningrad. And
he says similar initiatives, although more difficult
to undertake, are being made toward Belarus under
President Alyaksandr Lukashenka:
"Recently, we invited a group of journalists to
Lithuania from [Belarus]. And it was a composition
from all parts -- opposition, position [members from
the state-run press]. It was a unique situation --
they told us themselves. They are never in the same
room because those who are writing on behalf of the
Lukashenka regime, they are not talking to opposition
journalists, and they are not even communicating
[among themselves]. But in Lithuania, they were
together, and we brought them to military units, to
show how we are living, what is the style of life,
what we are thinking about. And you know, strangely,
even those newspapers -- government newspapers --
wrote quite positive articles. So I think it's really
modest, but a step in the right direction."
Overall, Linkevicius says the Baltics want to be
active "players" in the trans-Atlantic community and
strongly reject the notion that the tiny nations will
simply be "freeloaders" in NATO.
Latvia's Kristovskis agrees that the Baltics could
help the West forge new ties with Russia. He says he
welcomes warmer ties between Washington and Moscow and
between NATO and Russia, and says the alliance's
enlargement will only end up spreading democracy and
enhancing security throughout Europe.
Besides meeting with a range of military officials,
U.S. congressmen and the media, the Baltic defense
ministers held talks at the Pentagon yesterday with
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Armitage at the State
Department on 13 March.
http://www.rferl.org 
  

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