Baltic Sea: Russia wants to move maritime borders

Baltic Sea
Russia wants to move maritime borders

Unrest in the Baltic Sea: Russian plans to shift maritime borders are causing concern among neighboring countries. Photo

© Stefan Sauer/dpa

Russia has been waging war in Ukraine for more than two years. The country has now announced possible changes to its maritime borders. Even if a lot is still unclear: the neighbors are alarmed.

A Russian legislative project for the possible redefinition of its maritime borders in the Baltic Sea has caused confusion and great excitement among neighboring countries. “This is further evidence that Russia’s aggressive and revisionist policies pose a threat to the security of neighboring countries and the whole of Europe,” the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry said.

The background is a Ministry of Defense initiative published in the Russian government’s legal database to “determine geographical coordinates” to determine the border lines in various parts of the Baltic Sea. The reason for the project was that the old coordinates established during Soviet times were inaccurate and did not allow a continuous border line to be drawn.

The Defense Ministry specifically referred to a maritime area south of the Russian islands in the Gulf of Finland and to sections near the cities of Baltiysk and Zelenogradsk in the Kaliningrad region. The approach allows “the corresponding sea area to be used as a Russian inland sea,” the document says. However, several Russian agencies reported, citing a source in military-diplomatic circles, that the proposed law was not about expanding Russian territory. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the project had no political background.

The alarm bells were still ringing in the neighboring states. Russia’s actions could be viewed as a “conscious, targeted and escalating provocation” intended to intimidate neighboring countries and their societies, the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry said. Accordingly, the Russian envoy should be summoned to give a detailed explanation. Lithuania wants to coordinate a response with its partners.

Finland wants to wait for confirmation from Moscow

The assessment in Finland was somewhat more cautious. The authorities there first want to check the information from Russian media. “Russia has not contacted Finland on this matter. Finland acts as always: calmly and based on facts,” wrote President Alexander Stubb on X.

Sweden’s army chief Micael Biden warned of Moscow’s ambitions in the Baltic Sea – especially with a view to the Swedish island of Gotland. “I’m sure that Putin even has both eyes on Gotland,” Biden told the editorial network Germany. “Putin’s goal is to gain control of the Baltic Sea. (…) For Putin the Baltic Sea is just as important as it is important for us that it remains open and safe.”

dpa

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