Main

Secretary Blinken meets with Foreign Ministers from Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken meets with Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna, Latvian Foreign Minister Krišjānis Kariņš, and Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis, on March 25, 2024. Transcript: https://www.state.gov/secretary-antony-j-blinken-and-estonian-foreign-minister-margus-tsahkna-latvian-foreign-minister-krisjanis-karins-and-lithuanian-foreign-minister-gabrielius-landsbergis-before-their-meeting/ ---------- Under the leadership of the President and Secretary of State, the U.S. Department of State leads America’s foreign policy through diplomacy, advocacy, and assistance by advancing the interests of the American people, their safety and economic prosperity. On behalf of the American people we promote and demonstrate democratic values and advance a free, peaceful, and prosperous world. The Secretary of State, appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, is the President's chief foreign affairs adviser. The Secretary carries out the President's foreign policies through the State Department, which includes the Foreign Service, Civil Service and U.S. Agency for International Development. Get updates from the U.S. Department of State at www.state.gov and on social media! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/statedept Twitter: https://twitter.com/StateDept Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/statedept Flickr: https://flickr.com/photos/statephotos/ Subscribe to the State Department Blog: https://www.state.gov/blogs Watch on-demand State Department videos: https://video.state.gov/ Subscribe to The Week at State e-newsletter: http://ow.ly/diiN30ro7Cw State Department website: https://www.state.gov/ Careers website: https://careers.state.gov/ White House website: https://www.whitehouse.gov/ #StateDepartment #DepartmentofState #Diplomacy

U.S. Department of State

1 day ago

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Well, good morning, everyone. It is a great pleasure to  welcome my colleagues from Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia here today – our close  Baltic allies, our close Baltic partners. It’s very fitting that we come together today in  a number of ways. We’ll be celebrating the 20th anniversary of their accession to NATO, something  we very much look forward to, as we also have the 75th anniversary celebration of NATO itself coming  up in Washington in just a few months’ time. But
as important, these three  allies have been leaders in NATO, contributing significantly to their  defense budgets, leading the way in NATO, and also leading the way in support for Ukraine at  a time when that support is absolutely vital. And I think it’s a recognition on the part of all  three countries, as well as the United States, of what the stakes are when it comes to our  support for Ukraine – stakes that go beyond even Ukraine itself and to the basic principle  that people around the worl
d and countries around the world deserve to chart their own futures,  not have some other power try to do it for them. So it’s with gratitude that we have our partners  here. We have a lot of work to do together, both in terms of sustaining support for Ukraine  but also in continuing to plan out the future of the Alliance that joins us together – an Alliance  that is now stronger and bigger than it was, and one that has a future over its next 75  years that will be as important as its first 75.
So with that, let me turn it first, I think,  to Gabrielius to get us started. My friend. FOREIGN MINISTER LANDSBERGIS: Thank you so  much. It’s a great pleasure to be here and really to – and to use this – the opportunity to  thank United States for decades of cooperation and decades of making Baltic states and  Lithuania more safer and more secure. Today is also a date where we commemorate 75 years  of sad history, because 75 years ago that Soviet Union started their mass deportations from the
  Baltic states, where tens of thousands – even hundreds of thousands – of our compatriots were  deported to the wilderness of Siberia and had to spend their lives there. Many of them would  not be able to return to their home countries. And this memory serves us and makes us  better understand what we value today: the security, the safety, the prosperity  that we managed to get through the decades, and also looking to the future so that it  does not happen again – not in our countries, not in o
ther countries that are fighting  for their security and their freedom today, such as Ukraine, and Moldova looking for accession  to EU, and Georgia that has been attacked in 2008. Thank you, Secretary. SECRETARY BLINKEN: Thank you. Margus. FOREIGN MINISTER TSAHKNA: Thank you. Thank you  for receiving us. And as you mentioned as well, this week we are celebrating the 20 years  of full membership of NATO. And I can say, I think very honestly, that probably without  that membership we couldn’t sta
nd here as three foreign minister of three independent  countries, because Russia is not following the understanding of international law  and rules. So we are very happy about this transatlantic relations, what we have,  and our meeting will focus on that as well. But as our good friend Gabrielius said,  today is a sad day. Thirty-five years ago, 100,000 of our people were deported,  and exactly the same thing is going on in Ukraine at the moment when we are meeting. So  it is very crucial that
we will support Ukraine during the war, so that what we are doing  all together. So thank you for listening. SECRETARY BLINKEN: Krišjānis. FOREIGN MINISTER KARIŅŠ: Thank you very much,  Tony. It’s a great pleasure to be here. The United States, Latvia, and the Baltic countries,  we’re separated by very many kilometers. But we are deeply united in our basic values: freedom,  democracy, the rule of law. And we see that our basic values that our societies share are  being directly challenged aroun
d the world. Notably in our region, it’s Russia’s war  of aggression against Ukraine. We’re going into the third year. And it’s up to us, with our  combined efforts, with NATO’s combined efforts, to stand up against that and to not only say “this  is bad,” but to make sure that that evil does not have a chance to spread. Deterrence, long term  – a long-term strategy also with dealing with an aggressive Russia, this is what we have to  strive towards. And it’s only by democracies and likeminded n
ations and societies working  together that we can make the world a safer place. SECRETARY BLINKEN: Thank you. Thanks, everyone.

Comments