RT.com
30 Mar 2025, 18:04 GMT+10
Estonia and Lithuania are concerned Moscow could redeploy its forces to their borders if the fighting stops, the outlet has said
The Baltic nations believe a ceasefire in the Ukraine conflict would increase the security threat they face, the Financial Times has reported, citing the defense ministers of the countries.
In recent weeks, a 30-day pause on strikes against energy infrastructure by Moscow and Kiev has been agreed upon, while there have been moves toward reviving the Black Sea grain deal as part of efforts to find a diplomatic solution to the conflict.
The FT said in an article on Sunday that "a full ceasefire is still seen as far off," but officials in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, who have been among the most vocal backers of Ukraine in the EU and NATO since the escalation between Moscow and Kiev in February 2022, are already concerned that it might be achieved at some point.
"We all understand that when the war in Ukraine will be stopped, Russia will redistribute its forces very quickly. That means also the threat level will increase significantly very quickly," Estonian Defense Minister Hanno Pevkur told the outlet.
Pevkur claimed that Moscow could redeploy 300,000 troops from the contact line with Ukraine to Russia's western borders once a ceasefire takes effect.
Meanwhile, the Estonian defense minister rejected a plan by the UK and France to send a so-called "reassurance force" made up of Western European soldiers to Ukraine after the fighting stops.
"We cannot jeopardize the security of the eastern flank of NATO. We cannot fall into the trap that our forces are somehow fixed in Ukraine. Then we will have risks at our border," he explained.
The article also cited Lithuanian Defense Minister Dovile Sakaliene, who said earlier this week that "Russia will use this time following a ceasefire to speed up its military capabilities. They already have a huge, battlefield-trained army, which is going to get even bigger."
"Let us not have any illusions. Let us not lie to ourselves that Russia is going to be done after Ukraine," she said.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly dismissed claims that Moscow has any aggressive plans towards NATO as "nonsense" that is meant to scare the European population and justify increases in military spending.
READ MORE: EU to reject Russia-US Black Sea deal - von der Leyen
US President Donald Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, who met with Putin at the Kremlin earlier this month, told American journalist Tucker Carlson last week that Russia is "100% not" interested in invading NATO countries. Suggesting that Moscow harbors such plans is "preposterous," according to Witkoff.
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