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IX
LIES AND VIOLENCE AS INSTRUMENTS
OF RUSSIAN POLICY.
According to instructions drawn up
by the Moscow Politbureau, the task was to stage a coup d'etat in
several acts in all the three Baltic States at the same time. Unconstitutional
"elections" for puppet parliaments were organised with only one party, that of
the Communists, permitted. An emissary with special powers from the
Kremlin drew up the list of candidates. Participation in these "elections" was
compulsory for all citizens, but the voting results were fictitious. The
percentage of voters was almost identical in all three countries. Owing to bad
stage management the election results were published in the foreign press 24
hours before the count was complete.
During the elections the new
pro-Soviet Governments declared that they were all in favour of democracy and
the independence of the Baltic States and that all they wanted was to guide
their foreign policy in friendship to the U.S.S.R. The emissaries from Moscow
and the Communist Party head offices referred to conjectures that the Baltic
States might eventually become absorbed into the Soviet Union as malicious
rumours and provocative propaganda.
However, at the very first meeting
of the new "parliaments" simultaneously in all three republics, two fundamental
laws were passed without debate or discussion, without proper voting even: they
were passed by acclamation in the all-communist chambers. According to the
Constitutions which the Communists professed to respect, such laws could be
passed only by referendum. These laws were: (1) the making of the democratic
constitution null and void and the introduction of a soviet regime, and, (2) a
plea to the Supreme Soviet of U.S.S.R. for incorporation of Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania into the Soviet Union. The emissaries from Moscow were evidently
afraid of the results of a referendum and for that reason avoided it. They
preferred their illegal method as safer. Being, however,
unconstitutional, it is not binding on the Baltic nations. It is not
recognised, either, by Great Britain and the U.S.A. Therefore these unilateral
acts of force as a purely bare fact of military occupation can in no way
annihilate the sovereignty of the Baltic States, which continues to exist de
iure.
It has been stressed already that
the official relations between Russia and Latvia were of the best. The treaties
that professed friendship and peaceful collaboration have been enumerated, but
it cannot be emphasised enough that Russia had over and over again pledged to
refrain "from any act of aggression and violence against Latvia." (See Treaty
of Non-Aggression of February 5th, 1932.) Further, Russia had undertaken to
submit all disputes, whatever their kind or origin, which could not be settled
by ordinary diplomatic methods, to a procedure of arbitration in a joint
Conciliation Commission. The functions of this commission were regulated by a
special Convention, signed at Riga, June 18th, 1932.
Yet Russia finally resolved on an
act of aggression, and disregarded any means of peaceful settlement of the
"dispute."
LATVIA AN
HONEST AND LOYAL MEMBER OF THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY.
In the short period of her
independence, Latvia proved to be an honest and loyal member of the family of
democratic nations. Foreign experts, newspapermen and travellers have
praised the progress of the Baltic States. The English publicist, O. Keun
(Continental Stakes, 1944), writes that "these small countries... set an
example of peace, common sense, decency and progress to the whole world." Or
let us quote from the statement of the Government of the United States,
published on July 23rd, 1940: "From the day when the peoples of the republics
of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania first gained their independence and democratic
government, the people of the United States have watched their admirable
progress in self-government with deep and sympathetic interest." We must agree
with the British author, B. Newman (The New Europe, 1943), that "the
greatest need of Latvia was the one thing denied - another twenty years of
peace."
RIGHT
FROM THE START THE SOVIETS TRY TO SUBJUGATE THE BALTIC STATES.
Despite democratic phraseology,
international treaties, solemn promises of Soviet statesmen and the word of
honour of Stalin himself, Soviet Russia never dropped its imperialistic policy
of expansion to the shores of the "Sea of Social Revolution." In December,
1922, after the collapse of the Baltic disarmament conference in Moscow, and in
1926, after the unsuccessful communist coup d'etat in Tallinn of December
1st, 1924, Soviet Russia again offered proposals of a Treaty of Non-Aggression
and neutrality with the U.S.S.R. which would have isolated Latvia completely
from the League of Nations and put her at the mercy of the Soviets.
Then Soviet Russia tried to
achieve the same purpose by approaching Poland on January 5th, 1934, proposing
to the latter a scheme for joint Polish-Soviet overlordship over the Baltic
States. Poland rejected this offer. In March of 1934 Russia tried to establish
her suzerainty, proposing to the Baltic States a joint Russian-German
guarantee. This was rejected by Latvia and Germany. Because of Germany's
refusal, the pact of "Eastern Locarno," initiated by France and Soviet Russia,
also failed.
After Germany retook Memel on
March 22nd, 1939, from Lithuania, Moscow announced unilaterally that Latvia and
Estonia were in the sphere of Soviet Russian interest and from then on would be
under her special protection. This offer was firmly rejected by Latvia and
Estonia on April 8th, 1939. In August 1939, British and French diplomats were
in Moscow negotiating with Soviet Russia for a treaty against Germany.
But these negotiations also failed. In this connection we may quote the words
that Lord Halifax said in the House of Lords on December 5th, 1939: "Events
have shown that the judgment and the instinct of His Majesty's Government in
refusing agreement with the Soviet Government on the terms of formulae covering
cases of indirect aggression on the Baltic States were right."
THE
FOURTH PARTITION OF POLAND GIVES RUSSIA FREE HAND IN THE BALTIC.
Finally, by the Secret Agreements
of August 23rd and September 28th, 1939, concluded between Ribbentrop and
Molotov, Soviet Russia obtained her long-desired free hand to occupy the Baltic
countries when it chose. Latvia and her sister republics were sold. On
September 1st, 1939, Germany attacked Poland, and on September 28th, before
Warsaw fell, Ribbentrop and Molotov signed a new Treaty of Friendship,
partitioning Poland - the fourth time in her history. The next victim after
Poland was Estonia: on September 28th, 1939, she was forced to accept the
so-called "Pact of Mutual Assistance." On October 5th came the turn of
Latvia. On October 10th that of Lithuania. The Finno-Russian War was not
foreseen in the Moscow programme and made the Soviets slow down the tempo of
their "foreign policy."
Conditions in Europe had gone from
bad to worse. In the middle of June, 1940, Germany was at the peak of her
military might. Hitler could freely determine the direction of his next blow.
Therefore Stalin decided to hurry up in order to get the share allotted to him
in the Secret Agreement, while the going was still good.
On May 28th, 1940, Molotov sent a
note the Lithuanian Minister in Moscow. It dealt with the alleged kidnapping of
two Russian soldiers in Lithuania. Lithuania proposed at once that a joint
Russian-Lithuanian commission should be appointed for the investigation of the
case. Moscow refused, and the day after the fall of Paris, on June 14th, 1940,
presented an ultimatum to Lithuania in which it accused the Baltic States of
military conspiracy against the U.S.S.R. Lithuania accepted the Soviet
ultimatum on June 15th, and immediately large numbers of Red Army troops
marched into Lithuania, taking up positions against Latvia and encircling her.
On the same day Latvian frontier guards were killed in order to create an
incident.
On June 16th, 1940, ultimata were
issued to Latvia and Estonia, containing the following claims: (1) The
establishment of pro-Soviet Governments which, under the protection of the Red
Army, would be better capable of carrying out the Pacts of Mutual Assistance;
(2) The free passage of Soviet troops into Estonia and Latvia in order to place
them in the most important centres and to avoid possible provocatory acts
against Soviet garrisons.
LATVIAN ARMY
READY TO FIGHT.
At first the small Latvian army
was ready to fight and ammunition was distributed. But, copying the Nazi method
in Czechoslovakia, Soviet Russia threatened to bomb Latvian cities if the
ultimatum was not accepted. To avoid a useless slaughter the Latvian Government
could do nothing but accept it. On June 17th the Red Army, being already
concentrated in huge masses on the Russian-Latvian border, entered Latvia, and
at noon of the same day appeared in the streets of Riga. On June 18th the
Russian cruiser Marat came into the port of Riga, bringing to Latvia the first
communist agitators, who, as early as the next day, organised a demonstration
of gratitude to extol "Liberator Stalin." The demonstration was preceded
by Russian tanks with red banners.
FLIMSY
EXCUSES.
In spite of all the treaties,
aggression by the Soviets against the small, peaceful Baltic States became an
accomplished fact. As pretext for such an act of violation, we read in the
Soviet ultimatum of June 16th, 1940, as follows:
- Not withdrawing from Military Alliance with
Estonia, signed on November 1st, 1923. (This was a purely defensive alliance
aimed against any aggressor, which was duly registered with the League of
Nations, and never previously had Soviet Russia objected to it.)
- Extending this Alliance by enticing into it
Lithuania and attempting to include in it also Finland. (This assertion was not
true. Such a triple alliance was never concluded, and even after the occupation
of all three Baltic States, nobody has been able to produce the authentic
document of such a treaty, although all the Baltic Archives have been at the
disposal of the Soviets.)
- Holding two secret conferences of the three Baltic
States in December, 1939, and March, 1940. (As a matter of fact, at the
mentioned times there had taken place the regular conferences of the Baltic
Foreign Ministers, but these were neither secret nor dealing with the alleged
Triple Alliance. Such conferences, twice a year, were foreseen in the Treaty of
Collaboration of the Baltic States, signed in 1934, and duly lodged with the
League of Nations.)
- Enhancement of relations between the general staffs
of the three Baltic States secretly from the Soviet Union. (This pretext is
without any ground, and it would be ridiculous to imagine that the three small
countries whose ports, airfields, gulfs, islands and barracks were occupied by
Russian forces were planning aggression against the U.S.S.R., with her
population of 180 millions.)
- The creation in February, 1940, of a special press
organ of the military Baltic Entente - The Revue Baltique. (Surely no
one can believe that this trilingual press organ, published by the Societies of
Friendship of the Baltic peoples, and dedicated to information about cultural
and economic life, had been established to discuss the plans of a secret
military alliance. There have been in Latvia many similar Societies of
Friendship, with Latvian, French, English, Swedish and Italian
membership, intended to develop the study of the respective languages,
literatures and arts.)
ACCORDING TO
PLAN.
The succeeding developments went
according to programme: the same for all three Baltic States. Extraordinary
envoys from the Kremlin were given charge of the precise fulfilment of the
programme. Mr. Vishinsky was stage-manager for Latvia. The next events are
briefly the following:
On June 21st Mr. Vishinsky
nominated a provisional Government for Latvia, with the instruction to arrange
new elections for the Parliament. Although the Electoral Law of June 9th, 1922,
foresees that each 100 electors may hand in a list of candidates, these
elections took place on July 14th15th, with only one list of candidates,
which was composed by the communist party and affirmed by Mr. Vishinsky. The
attempt of Social-Democrats and the Democratic bloc to share in these elections
with their own second list failed, because of Mr. Vishinsky's prohibition to
print these lists, because of the closing of their election bureau and because
of imprisonments made by the N.K.V.D. In the meantime the President of Latvia,
K. Ulmanis, and his ministers, were arrested and deported to the U.S.S.R.
On July 21st the newly elected
Parliament was convoked and published in a hurry a host of bills on
nationalisation and sovietisation of land, rural and urban property, buildings,
ships and banking offices, elaborated by the Kremlin, and sent a telegram of
gratitude to Stalin for "the deliverance of Latvia from plutocratic yoke.
DEVIOUS
PROCESSES.
Although, before the election, the
official organ of the Latvian communist party, Cina, and the new Prime
Minister, Mr. Kirchensteins, declared as "provocatory" all rumours about the
intention of the U.S.S.R. to incorporate Latvia, this question was on the Order
of the Day at the first sitting of the "parliament." It was a stunning blow to
the electorate. On August 5th, 1940, this enormous constitutional change was
already accepted and sealed by the Kremlin, and so at the "free request" of
Latvia she lost her sovereignty and was proclaimed the sixteenth republic of
the U.S.S.R.
The Soviets may assert as loudly
as they please that all this puppetshow managed by Mr. Vyshinsky was enacted
according to the stipulations of the Latvian Constitution of February 15th,
1922. All the same, the decision of the Latvian pseudo-parliament remains an
act of violation of Latvian laws and constitution. Its sanctioning by the world
would be preposterous. Under article 77 of the Latvian Constitution no Acts
concerning the independence of the state, its frontiers, the sovereign powers
being vested in the people, or concerning the change of the parliamentary
electoral law (which prescribes direct, equal, general, secret and proportional
ballot) can be adopted by parliament without a following referendum.
These stipulations of the Latvian
Constitution can therefore be changed only by popular referendum in which at
least two-thirds of the electorate have taken part, and not less than half of
the voters have expressed themselves in favour of such changes. The
decision of the Latvian pseudo-parliament, therefore, remains null and
void and the incorporation into the U.S.S.R. valueless, from the point of view
of International Law as well as from the standpoint of Latvian Constitutional
Law. The sovereignty of a State cannot be abolished by the bare fact of
military occupation, and therefore all three Baltic States remain
Sovereign States, in spite of all acts of violence against law, treaties and
humanity. This principle has been more than once declared by the Governments of
the United Kingdom and the U.S.A.
The Acting Secretary of State of
the U.S.A., Mr. Sumner Wells, described the activities of the Soviet in the
Baltic in States in 1940 as: "the devious process whereunder the political
independence and territorial integrity of the three small Baltic republics -
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - were to be deliberately annihilated by one of
their more powerful neighbours."
Latvia and the other Baltic States
have been the victims of brute force and naked might. It is the fundamental
principle of the Western civilised world that might does not constitute right.
Justice must rule human relations, and for justice we appeal to the Western
Christianity.
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