Lithuanian president backs Trump’s NATO defense spending goal amid
ongoing Russian threat
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[January 31, 2025]
By LIUDAS DAPKUS
VILNIUS, Lithuania (AP) — Securing an end to the fighting in Ukraine
must take place with Kyiv's full involvement and come with more defense
spending by regional countries to avoid any future Russian aggression,
according to Lithuania's president.
Gitanas Nausėda, the president of the Baltic coastal nation, told The
Associated Press in an interview Thursday that a settlement negotiated
without proper deterrent measures would allow Russia to consolidate its
forces and prepare for further aggression in the region.
Nausėda said that even when a ceasefire is reached in Ukraine, “you
cannot believe that the intentions of Russia will be just to stop and do
nothing.”
“They will use this break in order to consolidate, to strengthen the
military capabilities and to strike again in the future,” he told the AP
in Vilnius. "And then the main question is, what will be the next target
of Russia? Ukraine, maybe. Baltic countries, maybe.”
Lithuania, which was occupied by the Soviet Union until 1990, is
increasingly worried about the ongoing brutal war in Ukraine and the
aggression of its neighbor Russia.
Its geographical position — bordering Russia’s Kaliningrad exclave to
the west and Moscow’s proxy Belarus to the east — make it vulnerable to
a potential broader conflict launched from the Kremlin even after an
eventual end to the war, Nausėda said.
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“You can never feel safe living in this part of the world, because we
have this neighbor, and we will still have it after one hundred or two
hundred years,” Nausėda said of Russia. “You always have the threat from
the East, and you must be aware and take all the necessary precautionary
measures in order not to be attacked.”
“This is not individual country-by-country conflict," he added. "This is
a challenge of Putin towards NATO."
‘Unacceptable’ if ceasefire plans exclude Kyiv
The country recently became the first member of the NATO military
alliance to commit to raising its defense spending to at least 5% of its
overall national economic output, as called for by U.S. President Donald
Trump.
A longtime critic of NATO countries that do not spend more on defense,
Trump has threatened he would not defend alliance members that fail to
meet defense spending goals. While some European countries have signaled
upping their spending to Trump’s desired 5% of GDP would be an economic
burden, other nations on the alliance’s eastern flank, including
Lithuania, have greeted the proposal as a necessity.
Before Trump took office earlier this month, questions over how he would
engage with the war in Ukraine loomed over European countries as some
speculated he would roll back the crucial military aid provided by the
administration of President Joe Biden. But after his inauguration, Trump
threatened to impose sanctions and tariffs on Moscow, and urged Russian
President Vladimir Putin to “settle now and stop this ridiculous war.”
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Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda speaks during an interview with
The Associated Press at the President's palace in Vilnius,
Lithuania, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Mindaugas Kulbis)
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Nausėda said the new U.S. administration must ensure that Kyiv is
fully involved in negotiations to end the fighting, and that a
resolution to the conflict should not be drawn up bilaterally
between Moscow and Washington.
“It would be unacceptable if the peace would be set behind the doors
and without the involvement of Ukraine," he said. “Ukraine paid a
very high price in this war. Ukraine lost many human lives.
Infrastructure, facilities and houses are destroyed. The Ukrainian
people deserve the right to set the conditions of this peace.”
“I think that President Donald Trump understands that: no peace
negotiations without Ukraine,” he added.
Suspicions over damaged undersea cables
Another security concern facing Lithuania and the region is a series
of events that have damaged undersea cables and gas pipelines in the
Baltic Sea. At least 11 Baltic cables have been damaged since
October 2023. Most recently, a fiber optic cable connecting Latvia
and the Swedish island of Gotland reportedly ruptured on Sunday.
NATO launched a new mission dubbed “Baltic Sentry” earlier this
month to protect the underwater infrastructure vital to the economic
well-being of the region. Although cable operators note that sub-sea
cable damage is commonplace, the frequency and concentration of
incidents in the Baltic have heightened suspicions that damage might
have been deliberate.
To address those concerns, Nausėda said, “It is time for us to show
some muscle.”
“NATO and the EU should take more responsibility in surveying the
Baltic Sea, bringing additional maritime capabilities to prevent
such incidents in the future,” he said.
Some politicians in Lithuania have objected to the country raising
its military expenditures, already among the highest relative to GDP
in the 32-member NATO alliance.
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But Nausėda said Lithuania must show that it can be responsible for
its own defense.
“This is an absolutely clear priority for this country, as a
frontline country, that we have to spend more,” he said. "Of course,
we can rely on the support of our allies in NATO. But it would be
naive to expect that somebody will care about our security if there
will be clear indications that we are not able to defend ourselves.”
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