THE FALL AND RISE AND FALL AGAIN OF THE BALTIC STATES
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Transcript of THE FALL AND RISE AND FALL AGAIN OF THE BALTIC STATES
Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC
THE FALL AND RISE AND FALL AGAIN OF THE BALTIC STATESAuthor(s): Edward LucasSource: Foreign Policy, No. 173 (July/August 2009), pp. 72-79Published by: Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLCStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20684896 .
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1HE FALL AND RISE
AND FALL AGAIN
OF THE BALTIC STATES A recessionary tale from Europe's new basket cases. By Edward Lucas
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PORTRAYING THE BALTIC STATES in their current mess requires more than words and numbers. Only an old-fashioned chart, with a sea mon
ster, a whirlpool, or perhaps a skull and crossbones, would begin to do
justice to the plight of what were until recently the shining success stories
of the ex-communist world. Eating a meal in a deserted restaurant in one
of the fine old capital cities of Tallinn, Riga, or Vilnius gives a sense of the
collapse. So does the silence of the half-finished construction sites, the rock-bottom rates in the glitzy hotels that shot up during the boom years, and the fall of a Latvian
government under the weight of the current troubles. The Baltic states today are
prime candidates to be the new basket cases of Europe, with their double-digit economic declines, beleaguered governments, and shriveling state spending.
But 20 years ago, when I first visited what were then still the Soviet Baltic republics, the current problems
would have seemed an almost inconceivably desirable state of affairs. The Baltic states, for almost all intents and purposes, had ceased to exist to the outside world for nearly half a century. As a youngster in Britain in the
1970s, I had read of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania as one might read about the mythical land of Atlantis?a fabled place of the distant past, submerged by an un
imaginable catastrophe. In the early 1980s, I huddled with demonstrators in London, their banners reading, "Estonians out of Siberia! Soviets out of Estonia!" It
was hard to know which seemed less likely. In London, I met elderly, dignified survivors of the Baltic lost world in dusty rooms that reeked of irrelevance and desper ation. Even just visiting the Baltic states during their
years of Soviet rule was near impossible. Then came the small miracle of the 1990s. When I
lived in the Baltic states for the final two years of the Soviet era, I did not just discover Atlantis: I watched it rise out of the sea and join the United Nations. As the editor of the English-language weekly The Baltic In
dependent^ I chronicled what happened next: how the reborn republics cleaved to the West, shrugging off the economic and political legacy of the occupation.
Today, Atlantis is buffeted again by cruel and threat
ening tides. One is the sharp downturn in the domestic Baltic economies, which began two years ago when their reckless credit bubbles began popping. These had been inflated by the belief that the Baltic markets were rapidly converging with Europe's. Property prices and consumer
spending rocketed, creating huge current account deficits as Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians took advantage of the easy credit offered by banks keen to increase their market share in Europe's most dynamic new region.
Square foot for square foot, prime apartments in the Bal tic capitals were costlier than in Copenhagen. On top of all that has now crashed an even larger
wave: the global recession. As small, open econo
mies, the Baltic states thrive when their neighbors are
booming, and wither when they slump. In the current
downturn, demand for Baltic products?food, furni
ture, tourism?is sinking both in European markets and in Russia. That has led to stunning GDP falls in all three countries. In the first quarter of 2009 alone, GDP
dropped at a 12 percent annual rate in Lithuania, 15
percent in Estonia, and 18 percent in Latvia. Forced to
accept an IMF-led bailout in December, Latvia is now
struggling to meet its loan conditions. Public-sector sal aries there were cut by at least 20 percent. Discretionary public spending is to fall 40 percent.
A third crashing tide is geopolitics. Russia looms next
door to the Baltic states as a contemptuous and even
hostile neighbor that has played out repeated military exercises based on the scenario of reconquest. The three Baltic states are today members of NATO but often feel
they are on its margins: in the alliance on paper, but
lacking the contingency planning and military presence that would bolster the security guarantee provided by Article V of the NATO treaty. Russia's increasingly an
gry rhetoric and ominous moves may seem like empty
posturing from the safety of Brussels or Washington, but from a Baltic standpoint they are threatening?and all the more so for having thus far prompted no clear
Western response.
It used to be Belgium that was counted as the "cock
pit of Europe"?the place where great-power interests clashed and were settled. Now it is the Baltic states.
At stake is not just NATO's credibility, but also that of
Edward Lucas is a senior writer at The Economist and
author ofThe New Cold War: Putin's Russia and the Threat to the West.
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the whole post-communist experiment: Is it possible for small countries on Russia's borders to gain durable
prosperity, security, and freedom, with their destiny de termined by their own talents and virtues? Or will the ebb and flow of economic fortune ultimately prove that these small states are unsustainable as anything but sa
trapies for more powerful neighbors?
To answer those questions, one has to start
with the past. For though the Baltic states share flat landscapes and culinary quirks (herring for breakfast, potatoes for lunch and
dinner), what they really have in common is their tragic recent history.
For each Baltic state, Soviet rule effectively brought a cultural revolution. National elites were murdered or exiled. Hundreds of thousands were deported, ex
ecuted, or starved to death. Collectivization destroyed the peasant farms that had been the backbone of Baltic economies and societies. Finally came the suffocation of national identity through mass immigration of Russian
speakers from other parts of the Soviet Union and the
purging of books that might portray the era of Baltic
independence in favorable terms. Estonia's leading nov
elist, the late Jaan Kross, remembered watching books from his country's main university library destroyed by an ax-wielding apparatchik. What particularly aroused Russian ire (and still
does) was that after the 1940 1941 Soviet occupation, Estonians and Latvians did not see the pros pect of another one as "libera
tion." Indeed, from 1944 onward, many Baltic citizens fought hard
against Soviet forces, even shoul
der to shoulder with the Nazis at times. The bad blood still lingers, as seen two years ago when Esto nia (or eSStonia, as Russian propagandists still call it) decided to relocate a Soviet war memorial from the cen ter of Tallinn to a military cemetery on the outskirts of town. For Russians, the bronze statue was "Alyosha the
Liberator"; for Estonians, it was "The Unknown Rap ist." The result was a fierce diplomatic spat, the besieg ing of the Estonian Embassy in Moscow, and a mam
moth cyberattack that briefly disrupted public services. The bleakness of life inside the Baltic states during the
occupation era was matched by overseas apathy, even
hostility, toward their fate. Britain handed over to the Kremlin the Baltic gold reserves, which had been en
trusted to the Bank of England for safekeeping. Dusty embassies in Washington and elsewhere maintained
the vestiges of legal existence, and a dwindling band of elderly Baltic diplomats would gather for occasional
meetings at the U.S. State Department, where their flags still hung in the lobby. It was a good way to annoy the
Kremlin, but the cause of Baltic independence was all but dead. Those who persisted in raising it were seen as
eccentric, out of touch, and irrelevant. Czeslaw Milosz, the Polish ?migr? poet and Nobel Prize winner, wrote in his seminal work on totalitarianism, The Captive Mind, that he could not stop thinking about the Baltic states,
which he described as being "boiled down" in a pot with a "tightly closed lid." But he also said that others
regarded his preoccupation as the epitome of futility: It would waste his life and awake the "wrath of Zeus."
After regaining independence in the early 1990s, the Baltic countries could easily have turned out like Mol dova: semifailed states on Europe's periphery, corrupt,
geopolitically hamstrung, and surviving on remittances. Their foreign trade was entirely tied to the collapsed So viet economy. They had no independent institutions and no civil servants capable of running a modern state. Their
politicians were a mix of wily but untrustworthy Soviet
holdovers, unworldly professors (Lithuania's first post Soviet president, Vytautas Landsbergis, was a musicolo
gist), and inexperienced youngsters (Juri Luik, Estonia's
representative to NATO, entered high office at 26). All the while, the KGB used its cash, connections, and inti
mate knowledge of "the lives of others" to preserve and
expand its influence?a task made easier by the unsolved
Is it possible for small countries on Russia's borders to gain durable prosperity, security, and freedom?
question of how to deal with the hundreds of thousands of Soviet-era migrants and their descendants.
That combination of problems meant that few saw the Baltic states as future members of serious Western clubs.
They were too flaky for the European Union, too geopo litically sensitive for NATO, and too poor for the OECD.
And many in the West told them so. As the Cold War wound down, Baltic leaders aspiring to independence received not warm words of encouragement from the
West, but rebukes. Why were they so impatient? Why were they impeding Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms with their hard-line nationalism? A Finnish official even told me once that Estonian independence would be an economic and political disaster that would
prove a "catastrophe"?for Finland! Such points went
down badly in the Baltics, and not surprisingly. It was
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akin to telling a prisoner to consider his captors' feel
ings, rather than trying to escape. So how did the Baltic countries do it, succeeding so
brilliantly and so quickly? Part of it was luck: Russia was weak, and its potential for mischief was initially quite limited. In addition, the Baltic diasporas provided a serendipitous assortment of unlikely leaders. Lithu ania's president, V?idas Adamkus, spent most of his life as a civil servant in the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency. His Estonian counterpart, Toomas Hendrik
lives, was raised in the United States and educated at Columbia University. Former Latvian President Vaira
Vike-Freiberga spent most of her life in Canada as a
psychology professor. Hundreds of lesser-known others in the 1990s helped rebuild everything from the diplo
matic service to business.
But the biggest reason for the success of the Baltic states was good policymaking, usually introduced first in Estonia and then copied by the other two. In barely two years, from 1992 to 1994, the radical reforming Es tonian government of Mart Laar introduced a flat tax,
privatized most national industry in transparent public tenders, abolished tariffs and subsidies, stabilized the
economy, balanced the budget, and perhaps most cru
cially, restored the prewar kroon and pegged it to the rock-solid deutsche mark. As a result, Estonia became one of the most open and transparent economies in Eu
rope, and with growth came political stability: Russian
troops left the Baltic region by 1994, fears of Balkan
style ethnic conflicts receded, and Soviet noncitizens in Estonia and Latvia began to assimilate.
Competitive advantage began to emerge. The first business to boom was transit. Then, though the Baltic states had practically no indigenous metallurgical indus
try, they became major players in the metals trade. Next came manufacturing, thanks to outsourcing from old
Europe. Foreign investment poured in, and with it tech
nology and know-how. Productivity soared, and tour ism took off, as foreigners discovered the chocolate-box charms of Tallinn, the vistas of Jugendstil buildings in
Riga, and the baroque splendors of Vilnius. Estonia did particularly well. High-tech companies
set up there and became some of the country's largest employers. Estonian geeks in 2002 invented Skype, a
peer-to-peer Internet telephony software that now has more than 400 million users worldwide. The state also
pioneered "e-government," the idea of putting public administration online. At a time when these innova tions were unheard of elsewhere in Europe, Estonians could file their taxes on the Internet, vote electronically, and even watch a live Webcast of their prime minis ter's official waiting room. Visitors the world over came
to study the Estonian model of flat taxes, lean govern ment, and rapid innovation, which inspired no little
envy among Lithuanians and Latvians, not to mention resentment from the Russians next door.
As the new millennium dawned, Atlantis was back in business, free and democratic. But it was not secure.
That seemed to change in 2004, when after frustrating false starts and Western foot-dragging the Baltic states
gained membership in the European Union and NATO. The change was partly nominal. The states passed huge lumps of EU regulation into law, often with only cur
sory scrutiny of their implementation. NATO, for its
part, fudged the question of whether it would really be
willing to defend its new Baltic frontiers against Russia. The alliance's presence to this day in the Baltic states consists of a small squadron of fighter planes, provided by other countries on a rotating basis.
Still, the Baltic states seemed set for their happiest period ever. They were useful allies, the epitome of post communist success, and an integral part of the Euro atlantic world. They were secure and prosperous as never
before. And they had begun to lose the "ex-Soviet" label; that was for basket cases like Georgia and Ukraine.
It took the collapse of the Latvian government in February, amid fevered speculation about devalu ation and political unrest, to bring the Baltic states'
problems to the world's attention. Signs of trouble had been visible much earlier, however. For those
who knew the countries well, the sense of hubris in the
years of the post-2004 boom was almost stifling. Growth in Latvia, for example, was an unsustainable, debt-fueled 11.9 percent in 2006 and 10.2 percent in 2007. Current account deficits?a good sign of how far beyond its means a country is living?soared too, reaching nearly 25 percent of GDP. That made all three countries com
pletely dependent on outsiders' willingness to keep lend
ing them money. As upsets elsewhere in Europe from Ice land to Ireland have proved, the trouble with this model is that borrowing money is easy when you don't need
it, but difficult when you do. In past years, the inflows inflated the bubble. Now, national survival depends on the willingness of Swedish taxpayers to guarantee banks that so unwisely overextended themselves.
The boom years in the Baltics?as in so many other
fast-growing emerging markets?turned out to have
been wasted. Instead of firmly applying the brakes, run
ning large budget surpluses, tightening control of the
banking system, and taking urgent action to preserve competitiveness, politicians harvested the proceeds and
ignored the risks, thinking that the growth was the
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result of their own good decisions. Calls for caution were brushed aside. Rather, the impulse was, as Latvian
tycoon-turned-politician Ainars Slesers put it, to "put the pedal on the metal."
The detrimental effects of this mentality were clear. A
tight labor market sent standards in service industries
plunging. At the region's premier security thinkfest, the Lennart Meri Conference in Estonia in 2007, startled
delegates turned up for breakfast on Sunday morning at Tallinn's Radisson hotel to find that nothing was on offer. The staff simply hadn't turned up; the manager shrugged, "Who wants to work on a Sunday morning?" Foreign tourism operators began complaining. Once a
bargain destination for those seeking a quick break, the Baltic states became pricey before they became good.
The smugness not only fueled the boom, but it allowed for the dodging of decisions on issues ranging from cor
ruption and cronyism in politics to structural economic
problems. In Latvia and Lithuania particularly, politics stank. Lithuanian President Rolandas Paksas was forced out of office in 2004 amid allegations of extortion and links with Russian organized crime. Another high ranking Lithuanian politician, Viktor Uspaskich, fled to Russia when his bookkeeper turned over evidence to the authorities of serious breaches of party finance laws. Latvia was run by a bunch of party bosses with strong business ties, irreverently dubbed the "Politburo." On
repeated occasions they tried to fire the heads of auton omous public bodies, such as the chief of the anticor
ruption authority, who had come dangerously close to
uncovering how the country was run behind the scenes. The first clear sign of trouble came when the one big
bank in the region not owned by a foreign parent, Lat via's Parex Bank, got into difficulties in mid-2008. Parex had always been a questionable success story. In the late 1990s the bank used to advertise on Russian television
Welcome to Baltland Russian, the Baltic states are called pribalti
ya?literally, the "Baltic shore." That infuriates Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians, as do
most other attempts to lump them together. Es tonians are the prickliest: Toomas Hendrik lives, now president, angered his southern neighbors by saying that Estonia should be more fairly counted as a Nordic country, not a Baltic one. That was tactless. But in truth, the differences are legion and the similarities?barring one chunk of tragic 20th-century history?scant.
In Estonia and Latvia, national conscious ness began only in the 19th century with the emancipation of serfs, the growth of literacy, and the stirring of resentment against German barons and tsarist rule. Not so in Lithuania. Its identity is shaped by a folk memory of superpower status. The Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the last pagan state in Europe until 1387, once stretched to the shores of the Black Sea. It was larger than the Holy Roman Empire and had six official languages. Now the size of West Virginia with only 3.7 million people, Lithuania has shrunk. But its sense of grand identity remains. In any intra-Baltic discussion, Lithuania tends to lead with a grandiose self-centered plan, often with a blithe disregard for practicalities. In March 1990, for example, Lithuania mounted a frontal attack on the Soviet Union and declared independence; Estonia and Latvia, by contrast, initially held back and only declared "sovereignty."
The three countries also have different foreign phobias. Anti-Semitism has plagued Latvia and Lithuania, but not Estonia. Russia and Russifica
rimane
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tion worry Estonia and Latvia more than Lithu ania, which is instead twitchier about Poland. It has clashed with Poland repeatedly over the city of Vilnius (Polish-occupied in the interwar years) and in recent years over whether their respective minority populations can spell their names in official documents with letters such as Y (which exists in Polish but not the Lithuanian alphabet) or "u" (a Lithuanian letter nonexistent in Polish).
The three states have struggled, literally and figuratively, to find a common language. Older people speak Russian, usually badly in Estonia and rather well in Lithuania. Younger people speak English, often quite proficiently in Estonia and somewhat more rarely in Latvia and Lithuania. Almost no Baltic country studies or speaks the languages of the others. A Lithuanian diplomat once told me, "It is easier for us to find
a Chinese speaker than an Estonian speaker." Life under Soviet rule was different, too.
Some Lithuanians were able to watch Polish television?a huge excitement during the 1980-81 Solidarity era, and always more infor mative than Soviet propaganda. Similarly, from the early 1960s on, Estonians in the north of the country were able to receive Finnish television, which broadcast subtitled foreign films and documentaries: a vital window into the real world. Finns also flooded into Tallinn on cheap, visa free booze cruises. Estonians referred to them derisively as "moose" (because, as an Estonian woman once told me, they are "large and noisy, with clumsy mating habits").
The differences between the Baits are arcane and sometimes amusing. But they matter. Estonia's Nordic-style thrift, openness, and careful planning have proved almost ideal for the post-communist years. It was the wealthi est of the three before the occupation, and it is still the leader. But its smugness?the big weak point?has now let it down badly. Latvia's more diffuse identity has perhaps meant weaker bonds between state and society, which has allowed corruption to flourish and prevented a speedy response to the crisis. Lithuania's headstrong "we do it differently" approach has repeatedly cost it time and friends, but the lag spared the country the spending frenzy that has cost the other two so dearly.
Relations will never be as close as, say, be tween Estonia and Finland. But sibling rivalry has its virtues. It encourages innovation?what one country invents, the others can copy. And each country is determined to be the first to emerge from the crisis. ?Edward Lucas
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with a spot showing a $1 bill and the slogan "We are
closer than America." The clear implication was that Parex was a convenient means for rich Russians to get
their money out of the country. Parex strongly denies that it ever broke any Latvian law, and it has never been
prosecuted. However, the bank has come under intense
scrutiny from international officials seeking to combat
money laundering. Parex's weakness was that its depositors were mainly
offshore and highly mobile, while its lending had most
ly been to construction projects inside Latvia, many of which soured simultaneously. After depositors with drew nearly $430 million in the course of six weeks, the bank was nationalized in November for the token
price of a couple of dollars. It also received a bailout in excess of $380 million from the Latvian state and the
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The incident dented Latvia's reputation hugely. The
country's institutions had so far done an impressive job in seeming to insulate the running of the country from the political shenanigans of the elite. Now they had failed glaringly to supervise the country's best-known fi nancial business, with near-catastrophic consequences.
Latvia's financial weakness suddenly revealed the hol lowness of past success.
The crisis has not spared Estonia and Lithuania ei ther. A vivid illustration of that is the loss of air links
with the outside world. Flying direct to Tallinn or Vil nius from main European destinations has become dif ficult or outright impossible. Estonia's national carrier, Estonian Air, has cut back its routes sharply. Lithuania's
FlyLAL went bust amid an acrimonious dispute with the owner of the Vilnius airport, endangering the coun
try's role as the intellectual and diplomatic hub of the Baltic. Also at risk is Lithuania's cherished prize?its yearlong celebration of the selection of Vilnius as the
"European Capital of Culture" for 2009. Faced with a time-consuming and costly stopover in Copenhagen, Helsinki, or Frankfurt, many potential visitors may
simply decide to stay away. Once again, the Baltic states feel they are fading from the map.
The three countries face this round of economic hard
ship with many important policy levers out of reach. The obvious step would be to devalue their currencies, but because they are guarded by the banks, that move
would shake each country to its foundations while also
bankrupting the many households and firms that have loans in euros and Swiss francs. The Baltic states have no room to relax monetary policy. Nor can they use fis cal policy to ease the pain?borrowing money to boost state spending?because all three countries are trying to
meet the euro area's 3 percent budget deficit criterion.
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Instead, the Baltic states are pushing through an "in ternal devaluation," cutting wages and pruning bureau
cracy in the hope that these measures will boost their
exports and attract renewed foreign investment. The sole cushion is money from the European Union and other international lenders. It could work. The three Baltic economies have already shown that they can turn on a dime. They did this in 1991 under far harder con
ditions and again in 1998, after the Russian financial crisis. Still, these austerity measures require extraordi
nary patience and a high tolerance for pain among vot ers who will see their living standards plunge for the next two years. It also requires Swedish and other for
eign banks to stay the course on their bad loans, even as
they will lose money hand over fist. The big hope is that the crisis will prompt the reforms
that Baltic politicians so smugly skipped during the boom years. It is a scandal, for example, that higher ed ucation in all three countries is so second-rate. At least one of their universities should have turned itself into a strong competitor for students and faculty frustrated with the lumbering state-run universities of old Europe. Health, transportation, local government, and criminal
justice still retain striking levels of Soviet-style producer power, corruption, and inefficiency. Progress on these fronts would not just reassure voters that the state was
doing its job properly?it would also encourage exter
nal lenders, such as the European Union, to help keep the Baltic states afloat. If none of this happens, though, the water level will just keep going up.
The Baltic states' current fate epitomizes the wider story in Eastern Europe, of half-baked reforms pursued with more enthusiasm than
judgment. Looking back on the 20 years since the Berlin Wall fell, it is clear that the econom
ic difficulties facing the former captive nations were overestimated. Solidarity leader Lech Walesa once
said that turning a capitalist economy into a communist one was as easy as turning an aquarium into fish soup.
The difficulty was reversing the process. In fact, creat
ing a thriving capitalist system on the ruins of a planned economy has proved the easier part. The difficulty has been in building strong institutions with the political supervision necessary for them to stay healthy. A prime example is the currency regimes: To create
credibility, all three countries adopted strictly fixed ex
change rates. These gained totemic significance: The central banks that administer the currency pegs to the euro are the most trusted institutions in each country. Yet by 2004, it would have been far better to have the
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exchange rates more flexible. A revaluation in the boom
years would have cooled overheating; a devaluation now would stave off hypothermia.
The big question today is whether the Baltic states'
extraordinary flexibility and determination will allow them to recover as quickly as they toppled. The danger is twofold. One is that the critical mass of patriotism and solidarity that helped them overcome past difficul ties has dissipated. The most able people have another choice now: They can leave. Of my most impressive Bal tic friends, one is married to a Dutch diplomat and lives in Asia; several have jobs in the comfortable bureau cracies of the European Union or NATO. A sprinkling work in London or for multinational companies. When
they see the mess back home, they are torn: Should they abandon their careers and return, or stay on the com
fortable sidelines? The members of the Baltic diaspora, "who in their freedom had no homeland," had spent half a century waiting for the chance to help their cous
ins, "who in their homeland had no freedom," as the old toast goes. But it's unclear whether that romantic history
will repeat itself. Undoing the consequences of foreign occupation was a lot more glamorous than unraveling the consequences of a property boom or haggling about
swap arrangements with other central banks.
Second, the Baltic states' future is not just in their own hands. The economic crisis coincides with the rise of a re
surgent, revanchist Russia and its alliances with a divided and demoralized Europe. The most threatening prospect for Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians is the "Schroe derization" of German foreign policy?derived from former Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, whose conspicu ous friendship with Russian leader Vladimir Putin while in office morphed into the chairmanship of a contro versial Russian-German gas pipeline consortium with in months of his stepping down. The Baltic states feel
squeezed. Who will defend their economic and political interests when big countries once again make decisions over their heads?
Those fears are a little overblown for now. Poland and Sweden are two European heavyweights deter
mined to prevent a Russian-German axis from devel
oping further. Russia's own economic problems have somewhat lessened its bilious outpourings against the Baltic states. Yet the danger remains. As unemploy ment rises and social strains increase, the risk of local
Russian-speakers feeling victimized?or the indigenous populations blaming them?also increases. Russia has said on repeated occasions that it reserves the right to
intervene, even militarily, to defend the (unspecified) interests of its "compatriots" elsewhere in the former Soviet Union. After the 2008 conflict in Georgia, few can doubt their resolve to do so. Russia is also passing a law that will make illegal any attempt to equate Hitler and Stalin, which will criminalize the Baltic states' own version of their history.
Russia can exert other kinds of leverage, too. Lithua nia will be almost totally dependent on Russian gas, for
example, when it has to close its nuclear power station at Ignalina at the end of the year. Latvia's lucrative east west transit trade is one of the few bits of the economy that is still thriving. This creates potential for political pressure. Until the Baltic states have developed not only their economies but also their political institutions fully to Nordic levels, and completed their reintegration into the Western world, they will not be completely secure. And at present, the combination of a nationalist Russia and an economic downturn is alarming.
"We needed another 10 years," says Asta, one of my oldest Lithuanian friends. She's right. Atlantis rose from the depths. But the sea walls are still too low. And now
the water is rising again. H3
WANT TO KNOW MORE?
Edward Lucas's book The New Cold
War: Putin's Russia and the Threat to
the West (New York: Palgrave Macmil
lan, 2008) offers an in-depth look at the
Baltics' neighbor and former colonizer to
the East. Lucas also blogs about the region
at edwardlucas.blogspot.com.
For a comprehensive history of the Baltic
States from ancient times through the last
century, read Anatol Lieven's The Baltic Revo
lution (New Haven: Yale University Press,
1993). The Baltic States: mmmgmm Years of Independence: HHKH Estonia, Latvia, Lithu- ^HI^IH ania, 1917-1940 (Georg H^^3| von Rauch, New York: St. BW^^H Martin's Press, 1995) and HHBIm The Baltic States: Years of !'^ ^?
Dependence, 1940-1990
(Romuald Misiunas and Rein Taagepera,
Berkeley: University of California Press,
1993) together provide an integrated picture of Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia's
survival through years of Russian
colonialism, language discrimination, and
nationalist struggles.
For a literary depiction of the region, Wil
liam Palmer's The Good Republic (London:
Seeker & Warburg, 1990) vividly captures the journey of a Baltic emigrant returning
with soon-shattered innocence to his home
land. The Captive Mind, by Czeslaw Milosz,
poses moral dilemmas from the lives of
those living under totalitarian regimes.
3
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