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- <text id=91TT2016>
- <link 93TO0074>
- <link 91TT0215>
- <link 90TT0802>
- <link 90TT0049>
- <title>
- Sep. 09, 1991: The Baltics:Perils of Nationhood
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 09, 1991 Power Vacuum
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 35
- THE BALTICS
- Perils of Nationhood
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Baltics have their independence back, and foreign
- recognition, but they won't be able to break Moscow's grip
- right away
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James Carney and Ann M.
- Simmons/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> The last foreign envoy accredited to the Baltic republics
- left 50 years ago, after the Red Army extinguished their
- sovereignty. When Lithuania declared its independence anew in
- March 1990, no one came. But now that Lithuania, along with
- Latvia and Estonia, has reclaimed its freedom from the rubble of
- the Soviet state, foreign ministers and diplomats seem almost
- breathless in their rush to return. The first new ambassador on
- the scene was Denmark's Otto Borch, who said, "No assignment I
- have received has brought me greater pleasure than this one."
- Somehow the Latvians managed to find a handful of red-and-white
- Danish flags to wave as they cheered his arrival in Riga last
- week.
- </p>
- <p> A day later, the 12-nation European Community announced its
- recognition of the Baltics and its members' intention to open
- diplomatic relations "without delay." At an emotional ceremony in
- Bonn, the foreign ministers of the three republics personally
- accepted Germany's recognition. The 1939 nonaggression treaty
- between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union set the stage for
- Stalin's annexation of the Baltic states the following year. "It
- is only today," said Estonian foreign minister Lennart Meri,
- "that the last consequences of the Second World War have been
- done away with."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the French and Swedish foreign ministers, Roland
- Dumas and Sten Andersson, flew to the Baltics to prepare for the
- opening of their new embassies. By the end of the week, more than
- 30 countries had recognized the states as independent. All three
- states have advised the United Nations they intend to apply for
- membership.
- </p>
- <p> Washington did not join in the initial rush. The U.S. never
- accepted Soviet sovereignty over the Baltics, but it resisted
- public pressure to send in the diplomats. It held back partly to
- avoid complicating Mikhail Gorbachev's efforts to salvage the
- rest of the union and partly to be sure the three states were
- fully in control of their own territory. George Bush called on
- Moscow to stop standing "against the winds of the inevitable" and
- formalize Baltic independence. If Moscow keeps dawdling, the
- White House said, the U.S. would announce recognition this week.
- </p>
- <p> While officials in Moscow do not dispute the fact that the
- Baltics are out of the Soviet Union--and Russia's Boris Yeltsin
- has recognized them--Gorbachev still insists the final terms of
- their departure must be negotiated. Baltic leaders even share
- that view to some extent, if only to ensure a process that frees
- their republics from the grip of the more than 100,000 Soviet
- military, KGB and Interior Ministry troops still based there.
- </p>
- <p> Those negotiations have begun and have scored a few
- preliminary agreements. Lithuanians will no longer be drafted
- for the Soviet army and those in uniform now will be released.
- Lithuanians and Soviet guards are working together at border
- crossings, though there is still some confusion about who can
- legally issue visas to visitors. Estonia's parliament is to begin
- work on legislation setting up the republic's own defense
- ministry.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin informed the Baltic governments that the short-range
- nuclear weapons formerly on their soil have already been shipped
- back to Russia. KGB operations in Latvia have been banned, and
- all three republics plan to take over their security services.
- The hated "Black Berets" of the Interior Ministry, who are blamed
- for a series of nighttime bombings and killings of the separatist
- Balts, have been confined to barracks and are being withdrawn.
- According to the New York Times, one Black Beret unit commander
- in Lithuania, concerned that he and his men had become "outlaws,"
- appealed for asylum in the West because he feared their "human
- rights" were endangered.
- </p>
- <p> Lithuanian President Vytautas Landsbergis, who has been the
- firmest, most uncompromising Baltic leader, insists he wants all
- Soviet forces to go home. "Our needs would not be served by
- having Soviet troops here," he says. "I would like to see the
- withdrawal begin this year." Landsbergis conceded, however, that
- it might not be completed until all Soviet forces are pulled back
- from Germany around the end of 1994. The troops withdrawing from
- the West will need staging areas along their supply lines.
- </p>
- <p> Latvian President Anatoli Gorbunovs was less insistent. After
- talks with new Cabinet ministers in Moscow, he said that his
- country might allow the Soviet armed forces to use its bases
- during an extended transition period and that a status-of-forces
- treaty would be signed. Other local officials suggest offering
- base rights to Soviet naval and air units with the idea of
- earning hard currency from the leases.
- </p>
- <p> That question--how to earn money and make their way in the
- world--is the toughest one facing the Balts. Their road to
- independence has been hard and bloody, and the jubilation that
- followed their success was short-lived. They have virtually no
- natural resources, few products good enough for export to the
- West and little hard currency to pay for their needs on the
- world market. No matter how many new embassies open in Vilnius,
- Riga and Tallinn, the Baltics will remain dependent on trade with
- the other 12 Soviet republics.
- </p>
- <p> About 60% of the Baltics' gross national product comes from
- trade, almost all of it in raw materials imported from the other
- Soviet republics and processed goods re-exported to them. Hopes
- for large-scale foreign investment remain only hopes, in spite of
- the generous tax exemptions that have been offered over the past
- year. Baltic officials say Western businessmen have stayed away
- because of political instability, and it is likely to be a while
- before many foreigners feel confident enough about the region's
- future to invest.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the biggest problem for the Baltics is the oil
- supply. They import 97% of their fuel and pay for it in rubles at
- low, centrally subsidized prices. While overall trade between the
- Baltics and the other republics will probably hold level for some
- time, oil-rich republics like Russia will want to charge market
- prices, up to 10 times the present rate, for their fuel. That
- could cost Lithuania $700 million a year in hard currency it does
- not have. In July Lithuania charted a new course by signing an
- economic-cooperation treaty with the Russian republic, and it now
- hopes to barter food for oil. Latvia is less fortunate, since it
- doesn't even produce enough grain to feed itself. In Estonia both
- industrial and agricultural production are declining.
- </p>
- <p> To make the burden worse, local officials and what remains of
- the central government will have to settle who owns which
- portions of the major Moscow-controlled industries that are based
- in the Baltics. They include electronics factories, locomotive
- plants and telecommunications and semiconductor producers. Not
- only will the Baltic governments have to compensate Moscow for
- those enterprises, they will have to manage them with a work
- force that consists overwhelmingly of ethnic Russians who were
- recruited specifically to move to the Baltics for those jobs.
- </p>
- <p> The Russians in the region, though many voted for
- independence along with the Baltic natives, are feeling isolated
- and worried about potential persecution. Some Balts do in fact
- argue loudly that the Russians are colonists and should go home.
- Last week, in what used to be Lenin Square in Vilnius, a Russian
- worker said he was thinking seriously of renouncing his
- Lithuanian citizenship. He pointed to graffiti spray-painted on
- the base of the Lenin statue that read: RUSSIAN OCCUPIER, GO
- HOME. He said he knew the attack was aimed at the Communist Party
- faithful, "but it hurts just the same. It is no comfort to me
- that whoever wrote this is confused."
- </p>
- <p> A treaty between Lithuania and Russia ratified last month
- guarantees the civil rights of their citizens in both republics.
- Even so, many of the 1.7 million Russians in the Baltics are
- already so nervous and fearful of retribution that Yeltsin
- apparently decided he had to fly to Latvia for two days last
- week to reassure them.
- </p>
- <p> The Baltic governments would welcome some reassurance. On
- the day the European Community recognized the Baltics, its
- commission published a report estimating that the three new
- nations would need financial aid totaling $3 billion to carry
- them through their painful transition to a market economy. The
- E.C. invited the Baltic foreign ministers to meet to sign a
- special agreement on association with the Community. The Balts
- will attend with high hopes that special association status may
- bring aid and investment with it. But, wisely, they are hedging
- their bets. Though all three Baltic countries plan eventually to
- issue their own currency, they will continue to use the ruble for
- the immediate future.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-