Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda put his NATO-induced psychosis on full display in an interview with AP yesterday, in which he claimed that securing an end to the fighting in Ukraine must take place with Kiev’s full involvement, and come with more defense spending by regional countries to avoid any future Russian aggression, the threat of which will persist for another 100-200 years. Otherwise, he proclaimed, a settlement negotiated without proper deterrent measures would allow Russia to consolidate its forces and prepare for further aggression in the region. Nauseda said that even when a ceasefire is reached in Ukraine, “you cannot believe that the intentions of Russia will be just to stop and do nothing.”
“They will use this break in order to consolidate, to strengthen the military capabilities and to strike again in the future,” he told the AP in Vilnius, without providing any evidence of such Russian intentions. “And then the main question is, what will be the next target of Russia? Ukraine, maybe. Baltic countries, maybe.”
“You can never feel safe living in this part of the world, because we have this neighbor, and we will still have it after 100 or 200 years,” Nauseda said of Russia. “You always have the threat from the East, and you must be aware and take all the necessary precautionary measures in order not to be attacked.”
“This is not individual, country-by-country conflict,” he added. “This is a challenge of Putin towards NATO.”