NewsRussian dispute with Baltic nations reignites over history

Russian dispute with Baltic nations reignites over history

Russian politician Aleksey Zhuravlyov stated that the Baltic countries should belong to Russia. The deputy also spoke about the Suwałki Gap, which could facilitate land deliveries to Kaliningrad. "[Russia] is unfamiliar with the language of culture and civilization," said Ukrainian politician Anton Gerashchenko.

Aleksey Zhuravlyov talks about the Baltic countries and Russia.
Aleksey Zhuravlyov talks about the Baltic countries and Russia.
Images source: © X
Mateusz Kaluga

Many of the reports by Russian media and government representatives are likely not true. Such reports may be part of information warfare by the Russian Federation.

Another dispute has erupted between Russia and Lithuania. This time, it's about the name change of the museum dedicated to Lithuanian poet Kristijonas Donelaitis. The establishment will now be known as the Museum of Literature. Donelaitis was a Lutheran pastor from Little Lithuania, as Belsat reminds us. He was buried in a church in the village of Chistye Prudy in the Kaliningrad region near the border with Poland and Lithuania. It is there that the museum dedicated to the artist was established.

Russia's decision to rename a museum dedicated to Kristijonas Donelaitis, a classic of Lithuanian literature, is yet another unacceptable attempt at rewriting history. Even though the old inhabitants of Lithuania Minor, now part of the so-called Kaliningrad Oblast, are long gone, the last signs of Lithuanian culture there must be safeguarded. No matter how hard Russia tries, Karaliaučius (Königsberg in Lithuanian) will never become Kaliningrad!, wrote the Lithuanian president on X.

Russian officials reacted to the president's words. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova called the Lithuanian politician a "cardboard fool" and accused him of succumbing to "historical fantasies."

As Belsat adds, Zakharova stated that Lithuanians are ungrateful, because they received their current capital and the Vilnius region as a gift from Joseph Stalin in 1939.

In even stronger words, the chairman of the Defense Committee of the Russian Duma, Aleksey Zhuravlyov, sparked controversy with his statements about the belonging of the Baltic countries to Russia. "The Baltics should belong to Russia," the Russian stated.

According to the ANSA agency, Aleksey Zhuravlyov emphasised that Vilnius was part of the Tsarist Empire, and the Suwałki Gap, separating Belarus from Kaliningrad, could facilitate Russia's land deliveries to the Kaliningrad region. The politician urged Lithuanian politicians to remain silent, claiming that the Lithuanian army would not withstand a confrontation with Russia even for one day. According to the US army, the Suwałki Gap is one of the potentially most volatile points.

"These statements are no longer just coming from propagandists on television; they are being voiced by Russian officials. Russia has discarded its last inhibitions and no longer pretends to care about international law," stated Ukrainian politician Anton Gerashchenko. "[Russia] is unfamiliar with the language of culture and civilization. Its only method of communication is violence: threats, sabotage, bombings, and war," he added.
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