Forewarned and forearmed
As Russian provocations intensify, the Baltic states are focusing on long-term border defence plans
As Russia sinks ever deeper into its war against Ukraine, hybrid threats against EU countries have intensified. Cyberattacks on airport infrastructure, drone flyovers and violations of airspace by Russian aircraft have become increasingly frequent. With Russian military incursions creeping ever closer, Poland and the Baltic states have assumed the position of Europe’s exposed frontier.
Last June, the leaders of Poland, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania called for the construction of a defence line along the EU’s external borders with Russia and Belarus, which has been dubbed the Baltic Defence Line.
Russia has forced the EU’s hand into reallocating substantial resources to its eastern flank — and Russian threats are now being taken seriously, even if they amount to mere provocations.
Tax increases are inevitable, Rojaka admits, but she insists that defence spending is a direct investment in national security and economic growth.
Should the protests have succeeded, neither Kyiv nor Vilnius would have had to fear Belarusian involvement in the Russian aggression.









