As for NATO, it’s better for the big countries if they can hold Russia back in the Baltics and let them be the collateral damage. Sounds win-win to me.
And they get access to lots of cheaper labour directly (migration) and indirectly (outsourcing to people that will still buy your stuff).
As I’ve posted, the big banks in the Baltics are primarily not Baltic.
That access has its benefits, but also its price.
I guess I’m a believer that free trade works out well, well enough to create a system to support those left behind. Often the latter is left out however.
> As for NATO, it’s better for the big countries if they can hold Russia back in the Baltics and let them be the collateral damage. Sounds win-win to me.
Indeed.
Before the eastern expansion I had noticed years ago how portions of Niedersachsen bordering East Germany had been designed as a huge tank trap (dams could be blown up to flood the plains), and the bridges and some other civilian infrastructure was dual use as well (e.g. signed/scaled for tank passage). Likewise I discovered in late 1989 that a lot of the non-local roads between villages in the DDR weren't really passable by passenger cars but would still have bridges able to support heavy armour.
It seemed like a deliberate policy of both NATO and the Warsaw Pact that if there was to be yet another large war in Europe it should start in Germany for a change.
This is what Delaware managed to do successfully in the US.