The Oklahoman

In defense of NATO’s little guys

- Rich Lowry @RichLowry

Donald Trump thrives on an image of strength, so it’s never a good look when he inadverten­tly invokes the spirit of Neville Chamberlai­n, the British prime minister whose name has become a watchword for appeasemen­t.

In September 1938, Chamberlai­n referred to the process of the Nazis dismemberi­ng Czechoslov­akia as “a quarrel in a faraway country between people of whom we know nothing.”

In an interview on Fox News after his summit with Vladimir Putin, Trump accepted an invitation to question the U.S. commitment to Montenegro, a small nation in the Balkans that only joined NATO last year. “Montenegro is a tiny country with very strong people,” Trump mused. “They’re very aggressive people. They may get aggressive, and congratula­tions, you’re in World War III.”

Put aside the likelihood of Montenegro— population:

600,000— pursuing a war of aggression. This is clearly how Trump thinks of NATO’s lesser members. He talked this way during the campaign about three other small NATO countries: Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. The Baltics are immediatel­y in the line of Russian fire, as targets of harassment by Vladimir Putin and officially part of the Soviet Union as recently as 20 years ago. Every chink in NATO’s credibilit­y directly affects their security.

Much outrage has been directed at Trump’s frequent unwillingn­ess to say that the Russians meddled in our election. But his open questionin­g of the wisdom of defending small allies in faraway places is worse: A predatory Russian leader who has already annexed the territory of one neighborin­g sovereign country is listening.

The Baltic states know the consequenc­es of being abandoned to their fate. In the 20th century, they were vulnerable states in the worst time and place to be weak. The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, concluded on Aug. 23, 1939, divided Eastern Europe between the totalitari­an behemoths of Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s Soviet Union. The Soviets got the Baltics.

Stalin occupied and purged the Baltics, only to get swept aside when Hitler broke the pact and invaded Russia. The Nazis occupied and purged the Baltics in turn, before retreating back west, clearing the way for the Soviets to bulldoze the Baltics yet again. Incorporat­ed into the Soviet Union, the Baltic countries were significan­tly Russified. By the mid-1980s, only about 50 percent of people living in Latvia were Latvians.

With the end of the Cold War, the Baltics managed a miracle journey from captive nations to members of NATO, joining every internatio­nal organizati­on they could and putting their trust in Western norms and credibilit­y. They have all become vibrant, multiparty democracie­s.

They are small, yes, and far away, yes. But the line has to be drawn somewhere. If not at Tallinn, how about Helsinki? If not in Vilnius, in Warsaw? If in none of those places, in Prague or Berlin? Russia must have a westernmos­t boundary, enforced by a defensive alliance of like-minded Western democracie­s, otherwise Putin will be tempted to act yet again on his open musings about creating a greater Russia.

And if the U.S. simply turns its back on its signed-and-sealed Article 5 commitment to mutual self-defense under the NATO treaty, what is to become of the credibilit­y of its alliances and assurances for everyone else? If the Baltics ever fall, it will be very bad news for Taiwan and the effort to check Chinese expansioni­sm.

The marvelous speech Trump gave last year in Warsaw praised the persistenc­e of the Polish nation. Exactly the same thing could be said of the peoples of the Baltics, who, despite calamity after calamity, stayed true to their national culture and independen­ce, and have revived them under the auspices of the Western alliance.

Spare a thought for faraway places.

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE

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