Occupation or voluntary accession? (5)
Archived Articles | 15 Jul 2005  | Estonian Central Council in CanadaEWR


Moscow’s strident insistence that Estonia joined the USSR voluntarily, that the 50-plus years of Soviet subjugation was an amicable partnership underlies Russia’s hostility toward Estonia.

A recent example: the Estonian parliament recently added historical references to a preamble of a signed border treaty with Moscow. The additions referred to Estonia’s legal succession of the republic that declared its independence in 1918, the Soviet occupation, and the 1920 Peace Treaty of Tartu between Estonia and Communist Russia.

The preamble did not involve the agreed upon border demarcations, nor the 5% of territory gained by Russia. Simply put, the additions did not, even minutely, affect the substance of the treaty. Yet references to occupation strike a sensitive nerve in the Kremlin that induce a vehement denial of Pavlovian predictability.

Moscow anticipated, that with the passage of time, the mellowing of historical memory, that the initial perception of the USSR’s military aggression would become acceptable, that the brutal Soviet occupation would eventually be seen as legitimate.

However, with the exception of the Soviets, it is generally agreed that the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic (ESSR) was the product of unprovoked pre-planned aggression, military occupation and forcible annexation. The de jure recognition of the continuity of the Estonian republic as established in 1918 by most western countries was the practical yet unobtrusive application of this principle.

An intense diplomatic offensive was launched by Moscow in the late 1940’s and early 1950’s to break the West’s resolve in this matter. Though the USSR gained all they coveted in Central and Eastern Europe through the Teheran, Jalta and Potsdam agreements, Washington and London did not yield on the non-recognition policy. Neither did the West cede at the 1946 Paris peace conference nor at the establishment of the UN. The so-called Soviet “foreign ministers” of the three countries were deliberately and demonstratively ostracized at diplomatic encounters. While that gave little comfort to the subjugated peoples of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, it had far-reaching ramifications on the international chess board.

In 1974 the labour government of Australia recognized de jure the Soviet annexation of Estonia. This was an anomaly in the west. The next government duly returned to the internationally prevalent position.

This de jure non-recognition of the Soviet presence in Estonia was initiated by the USA on July 23, 1940 when Estonia had been militarily occupied. While this doctrine was generally accepted internationally in the west, the stance of the USA, the Vatican and Ireland was even more categorical – they even refused to recognize the Soviet annexation of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania de facto.

The Estonian Consulate General established in New York in the 1920’s had full diplomatic recognition from the State Department, and functioned in many matters as the accepted and legitimate foreign mission of an existing country.

(An aside: prior to August of 1991, - whenever the Estonian Central Council in Canada with their Latvian and Lithuanian counterparts organized events on Parliament Hill, whenever the honorary consuls of the three subjugated countries were acknowledged by the House of Commons, the Senate or hosted by the Department of External Affairs - the Soviet embassy in Ottawa protested profusely.)

In subsequent articles we will look at certain aspects of the USSR’s aggression, annexation and extended occupation.

Previously the Estonian Central Council had announced a commemorative gathering for the 65th anniversary of the Estonian occupation’s inception, to be held August 4th. This date has been changed, and the new date will be announced once final details are confirmed.

In the planning stages are a series of speakers forums, “Meel ja Mälu” (Mind & Memory.) Invited speakers will recount personal recollections of their lives during Soviet occupation in Estonia.The first “Meel ja Mälu” will be held on Thursday, Sept 8th at 1:00 pm at the Estonian House in Toronto.

THE ESTONIAN CENTRAL COUNCIL IN CANADA - LL



 

Viimased kommentaarid

Kommentaarid on kirjutatud EWR lugejate poolt. Nende sisu ei pruugi ühtida EWR toimetuse seisukohtadega.
urmas Rattur30 Jul 2005 20:25
I read an article on Interfax and the argument ran along the lines used by the whites after Worl War I, namely that Estonia was part of Russia, that had been removed against the wishes of its indigenous people by the nationalist usurpers.

I am reminded that the present post-colonial states of Vietnam, Algeria, Korea and Cuba asserted their right to self-determination by force of arms.

All of these states declared their sole reason for their struggles to be their right to self-determination.

By the same Marxist dialectic it is logical for the Estonian people to have a right to self-determination from the Russian imperialists.

How can the Russian government permit these slurs if it professes to want friendly relations with the Northern borders of the EU, whose passport Estonians now carry.
Maxim.18 Jul 2005 13:41
The language was agreed upon there and then; Russia and Germany are not that stupid to have not sought the initial "in pronciple" agreement of the USA-this is the crucial point-and the very same point which provides and safety valve for the USA. The US can say and do whatever it likes after that, but I very much doubt if her position was as rigorously fought out on that crucial day when the deal was done. It's the very same stuff that "sell-outs" are made of. England is another case in point, but that is a slightly different subject.
Sõber18 Jul 2005 06:21
Maxim makes an interesting poimt. But when did the USA know about the seceret protocols of the MRP for it to be in agreement with Europe being divided between Nazi germany and the Soviet Union? Who are the aggressors setting off WWII? Non other than the USSR and the Third Reich. What other countries invaded and occupied foreign territory in Europe at the time. We acknowledge Japan's and Italy's aggression, but eleswhere geographically.

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