The bullies of Vilnius
March 1990: How Mikhail Gorbachev reacted to Lithuania's desire for independence
MIGHT does not make right, not even in Mikhail Gorbachev's Soviet Union. The man fêted last year as the Liberator of Warsaw, Berlin and Prague has already shown enough of a brutal streak in Lithuania to be dubbed instead the Bully of Vilnius. Mr Gorbachev draws a distinction between the Soviet empire in Eastern Europe and the Soviet empire at home. Some differences there are, but the central point is identical: Lithuanians have as much right peaceably to decide their own future as Poles and Germans do. If Mr Gorbachev is willing to acknowledge this, he will find a way to back his armoured cars out of the Lithuanian dead-end they have gone into this week. But if his real intention is not to release the captive parts of the Soviet empire on any reasonable terms, he will use the power—and the firepower—at his disposal to break Lithuania. That is when the West will have to show that it no longer finds Mr Gorbachev a man it can do business with.
More from Leaders
The real meaning of the DeepSeek drama
The Chinese model-maker has panicked investors. But it is good for the users of AI
Rwanda does a Putin in Congo
To understand the seizure of Goma, consider a parallel with Ukraine
Sir Keir Starmer should aim higher in his reset with the EU
And he needs to be clearer about what Britain wants
To make electricity cheaper and greener, connect the world’s grids
Less than 3% of the world’s power is internationally traded—a huge wasted opportunity
Chinese AI is catching up, posing a dilemma for Donald Trump
The success of DeepSeek and other Chinese modelmakers threatens America’s lead
America has an imperial presidency
And in Donald Trump, an imperialist president for the first time in over a century