
Main narratives:
- Baltic states are Russophobic;
- Europe is abandoning the Baltic States.
Overview:
Pro-Kremlin Telegram channels portrayed Baltic states, particularly Latvia, as irrational “Russophobes” and “warmongers.” These channels misrepresented a statement from Latvia’s Minister of Education and Science Dace Melbārde, claiming she called Europe to start “anti-Russian escalation up to a direct military confrontation” without proper context.
The channels frequently characterize Baltic citizens as puppets of Western powers. Last week one post described Baltics as trained “animals” conditioned by the United States to be hostile toward Russia. This dehumanizing rhetoric attempts to delegitimize legitimate security concerns held by countries that have experienced Soviet occupation.
Historical revisionism features prominently, with these channels drawing false equivalencies between past German rule, when Latvians were allegedly “slaves” to the “ubermensch,” and what they characterize as current Baltic “slavery” to “Anglo-Saxons.” This narrative seeks to portray NATO membership as a form of subjugation rather than a sovereign choice.
Pro-Kremlin channels also work to create perceptions of abandonment, claiming that “the West does not care about the Baltic States.” They framed increased EU defense spending as evidence that Europe is “cutting off funding for the border states” rather than strengthening collective security. These channels frequently employ intimidation tactics, describing how Russian weapons would turn “frontline states, eager to fight a nuclear power… into a lunar landscape.”
These narratives represent attempts to undermine Baltic sovereignty, create divisions within NATO and the EU, and justify aggressive Russian posturing in the region.