Skip to main content
Best News Website or Mobile Service
WAN-IFRA Digital Media Awards Worldwide 2022
Best News Website or Mobile Service
Digital Media Awards Worldwide 2022
Hamburger Menu

Advertisement

Advertisement

Commentary

Commentary: Lithuania makes a stand against Russia by implementing EU sanctions

Vilnius' ban on the transit of sanctioned Russian goods to Kaliningrad leaves Moscow with little scope for action. It is unlikely to attack a NATO member and Lithuania does not rely on Russian energy, says this professor.

Commentary: Lithuania makes a stand against Russia by implementing EU sanctions

Cargo trains from the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad move to the border railway station in Kybartai, some 200km west of Vilnius, Lithuania, on Jun 22, 2022. (Photo: AP/Mindaugas Kulbis)

BATH, England: Tensions between Russia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), already stretched considerably by the invasion of Ukraine, have ratcheted up even further over Kaliningrad, a small piece of Russian territory sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic coast and cut off from mainland Russia.

Kaliningrad is a Russian oblast (region), of just under half a million people on the Baltic Sea. It sits between Lithuania to its north and east and Poland to its south and is about 1,300km from Moscow. It was claimed by the Soviet Union from Germany after World War II and has been controlled by Moscow ever since.

When the sixth round of European Union sanctions on Russia came into effect on Jun 17, Lithuania announced that sanctioned Russian goods to Kaliningrad would be banned from transit through Lithuania. The sanctions affect oil and refined oil products, and any technology that could be used for military purposes. Other products on the list were cement, construction materials and metal goods.

The decision jeopardises an agreement signed in April 2003 between the EU and Russia, which allowed people and goods from Kaliningrad to obtain a transit document for train travel across Lithuania to Russia.

The EU’s high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, Josep Borell, backed the decision, saying that Lithuania was correctly implementing EU sanctions.

LITHUANIA IS NOT BACKING DOWN

Moscow reacted immediately and strongly, threatening “serious consequences”, which, as yet, have not been specified.

On Jun 20, Lithuania’s charge d’affaires was summoned to the foreign ministry and told to cancel the restrictions or face the consequences.

A senator on Russia’s upper house – the Federation Council – Andrey Klimov, called on the EU to “correct Vilnius’ impudent little stunt”, while the head of Russia’s security council, Nikolai Patrushev, stated that the “appropriate measures” would have a “serious negative impact on the population of Lithuania”.

The heightened tensions between Vilnius and Moscow follow hot on the heels of a discussion in Russia’s State Duma on Jun 8 – the lower house of parliament – about revoking the Soviet Union’s recognition of Lithuania’s independence. By making a stand over transiting goods to Kaliningrad, Lithuania is also highlighting its sovereignty.

TARGETED ACTION AGAINST RUSSIA'S BALTIC THREAT

The deteriorating relationship between Russia and the West after the former’s invasion of the Donbas in 2014 saw Russia deploy short-range Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad in 2016 that could reach the Baltic State capitals and two-thirds of Poland. 

In April 2022, the Russian Baltic Sea Fleet air force ran simulated bombing campaigns in Kaliningrad. With more than 1,000 personnel – and at a time of heightened conflict over Ukraine – this was a big concern for Vilnius.

On Jun 22, the Russian military simulated missile attacks on Estonia, with the Baltic Sea Fleet heavily involved and helicopters violating Estonian airspace. Understandably, the Lithuanian authorities fear being cut off.

The Suwalki Gap is a stretch of land 100 kilometres long, stretching along the Lithuanian and Polish border dividing Belarus from Kaliningrad. The Suwalki Gap has long been NATO’s weak point as Russia could quickly isolate the Baltic States. 

Motorised infantry and artillery units in southwestern Russia practiced firing live ammunition and warplanes in Kaliningrad on the Baltic Sea. (Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP)

Although still an unlikely prospect, this would be NATO’s weakest point. So Russian military drills in Kaliningrad are viewed with alarm in Vilnius.

And, while Lithuania has the smallest Russian minority in the Baltic States, Moscow’s propaganda makes much of the ethnic Russian population in a similar way to its insistence that Crimea and the Donbas region are intimately tied through cultural and linguistic links to the Russian “motherland”.

So the ban on the transit of certain goods to Kaliningrad represents an important stand by Lithuania against Russia. While the original ban was on the transit of sanctioned goods by train, Vilnius extended the ban to goods moved by lorry on Jun 21.

There is little Russia can do as it is unlikely to attack a NATO member. Russian flights were banned from EU airspace three days after invading Ukraine and shipping companies quickly stopped working in Russian ports. Russia will be left looking for available domestic shipping, which could take months.

For Lithuania, it is a calculated risk. Since mid-2021, Lithuania has no longer directly relied on Russia for energy, having connected to the European power grid. Therefore, it is a targeted action by Lithuania that leaves Russia with little scope for action.

A VOCAL UKRAINE ALLY

Since Russia invaded Ukraine, Lithuania has sent more than €115 million (US$121 million) in military aid. In comparison, Italy has sent €152 million in military aid, and its GDP was higher at US$1.89 trillion in 2020. 

If you combine its humanitarian and military support to Ukraine, Lithuania has sent 0.2 per cent of its GDP. This is 0.02 per cent less than the US. In 2020, Lithuania’s GDP stood at US$56 billion. In contrast, America’s GDP in 2021 was US$23 trillion.

Well before the Russian invasion – in July 2021 – Lithuania called for Ukraine to be given NATO membership. It has repeated this call since the conflict started in February.

Lithuania was also among the first EU states to request that Brussels provide funding for Ukrainian refugees. Lithuania has been a principal advocate for Ukraine becoming an EU member and campaigned for Brussels to begin talks to facilitate that move.

The Russian government has called Lithuania’s actions a “blockade”. But people and unsanctioned goods can still transit across Lithuania and people from Kaliningrad can still enter Poland and Lithuania without a visa.

Reflecting Russia’s often surreal worldview, the authorities claim that it is illegal by international law to blockade Kaliningrad. But if it’s really a blockade, it’s a poor one – and Moscow knows all about blockades, having cut off Ukrainian ports, causing the current global food crisis.

Lithuania has yet again shown that it is prepared to stand up to autocrats.

Stephen Hall is an Assistant Professor in Politics, International Relations and Russia, at the University of Bath. This commentary first appeared in The Conversation.

Source: CNA/geh

Advertisement

Also worth reading

Advertisement