Column: Society
Region: Europe
This week,
President Trump sat down with the leaders of the three Baltic States at the
White House to discuss the Russian ‘threat’ that prevents them getting a good
night’s sleep. Unreported however, was the fact that on the same day that its
leader was being received in the White House, the Latvian government was
decreeing that the children of its 40% Russian population must be taught in
Latvian.
Before
sitting down at the White House to complain about the so-called ‘Russian
threat’ to his country, Latvian President Raimonds Vejonis signed a bill that
outlaws teaching in
Russian, even
in schools for ethnic minorities. The only exception is Russian language and
literature, or other subjects “connected with culture and history.”
Latvia’s Social Democratic Party Harmony protested against the new
law, saying that it contradicts both the constitution and the Council of
Europe’s framework convention on protection of minorities, ratified by the
Latvian parliament in 2005. Harmony called for the reversal of
anti-Russian education reforms, to no avail.
As could
be expected, the Russian lower house decried this
as “inadmissible”, warning
Riga of potential reciprocal economic sanctions, noting that the legislation violates the principles of the
European Union and the Council of Europe, of which Latvia is a member, as well
as the rules
established in the majority of civilized nations.Russian lawmakers intend to
appeal to the United Nations, the parliaments of European and Eurasian countries and the EU
leadership, warning that the new law could lead Russia to issue a partial
or full ban on financial operations, increase import tariffs, restrict
tourists and suspend certain bilateral trade agreements.
I’m sure
his Baltic guests did not tell President Trump that Russian speakers make up to
40 percent of Latvia’s 2 million population, and that all foreigners must pass a language
test to become citizens. Although most non-citizens are ethnic Russians,
there are also large numbers of Belarusi-ans, Ukrainians, Poles and
Lithuanians. Although language requirements are common when it comes to
citizenship just about everywhere, in Latvia, besides not having voting rights
and being unable to serve in the military, the police, or
as civil servants, Russians are also banned from being lawyers or working
in pharmacies!
This
latter suggests something sinister about Baltic attitudes toward their powerful
neighbor, however what is most striking is the fact that so-called experts on
Eastern Europe never mention the history that created these attitudes. Here is
an excerpt from my just-published Russia’s Americans:
There is no historical record of an
‘aggressive’ Russia. Russia, Poland, the Baltic princes, Sweden and Norway
fought each other for centuries. In order to understand how Ukraine has come to play
such an important role in all of this, it’s helpful to know that in the ninth
century, the inhabitants of the vast area between Prussia and the Ural
mountains invited the Viking King Ryrik (who became known as ‘Rus’) to impose
order in the region. He founded a new city, (‘Novgorod), south of what
eventually became St Petersburg. His successor, Oleg, moved south from Novgorod
and founded Kiev, which
became known as ‘Kievan
Rus’. That much revered original Russian state disintegrated during the two centuries of Mongol rule, after
which the Grand Dukes of Muscovy began taking over, according to a medieval
theory that allowed monarchs to simply declare a transfer of power.
With Kiev
no longer the center of the Russian state, the territories on its western periphery
coalesced into several entities which evolved into Poland, Ukraine, Belarus and
the Baltics. For hundreds of years, today’s Baltic countries, facing onto
the northern sea, were alternately Swedish Russian and Ukrainian
principalities, as was at times, Poland.
Currently,
with NATO troops and tanks currently poised along the entire length of Russia’s
Western border, from the Baltic to the Black Sea, the latest supine gesture of
the European Union toward its master is to have agreed to strengthen its infrastructure
to accommodate rapid military deployment needs.
Was that also discussed at the White House meeting between the three mice and
the eagle?
Deena Stryker is an
international expert, author and journalist that has been at the
forefront of international politics for over thirty years, exclusively for the
online journal “New
Eastern Outlook”.
https://journal-neo.org/2018/04/06/three-mice-an-eagle-and-a-bear/
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