Thursday, July 9, 2015

The nato excuse.....protecting balltic allies figthing against russia.....but baltic states is Russia citizen territory...(?)

After World War I, all three countries fought for their independence from the Bolshevists, the weak successor to the czar's empire. In 1939, Hitler and Stalin agreed to place the three countries under the Soviet sphere of influence. In contrast to Poland, though, the Red Army didn't march right in. The Soviets instead set up military bases in the Baltic countries and expanded influence from there in a way that would be echoed last year by developments in Crimea.

Is Nato-poland head of militarism against Baltic started wanted to change the agreement of soviet sphere....to be NATO-poland ,who's mayority are USA, Britain,German,etc...

Robert Pszczel is NATO's face in Russia. The head of NATO's Moscow office, he now both talks about - and listens to opinions on - NATO's evolving partnership with Russia.

Because as this article say,Baltic states are Russian citizen dominioum;

"Among other things, it resettled Russians on the Baltic Sea, and they were favored for government positions. Their descendants, approximately 1 million people, today represent the Russian minorities in the Baltic states. After the countries gained independence, members of the Russian minority were allowed to maintain their schools and their folklore. To obtain citizenship, however, they are required to prove their fluency in the national language and history.

Almost 14 percent of Latvians -- a segment comprised of 276,000 people, or about half of the Russian population -- have not become citizens. In Estonia, this figure lies at 6 percent. These so-called non-citizens are allowed to live there. But, at least in Latvia, they are not allowed to vote or run for political office.

At first glance, there is little if any division in daily life. One-third of the marriages in Estonia and Latvia are mixed. But on many levels, the Russian minorities and the rest of the Baltic population actually do live in two distinct worlds and in two different information societies. The former get their news from Russian television and radio programs, all of which disseminate Kremlin propaganda. The others, by contrast, watch national programs. There is also a Russian-language broadcaster with programming from the Baltic countries, but it tends to run boring educational programs and is less captivating for viewers than the soap operas and shows produced in Moscow and St." Petersburg.


http://m.spiegel.de/international/world/a-1041448.html

Is this another brithain NATO excuse to invade the Baltic's territory claiming Russia try to invade their allies when majority is Russians...(?)

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