25 March 2022
We hear nothing of Kaliningrad (formerly Prussian Konigsberg). This "exclave" was included in the German Empire in 1871 and then as part of the WW2 settlement, Konigsberg was given to Russia and renamed.
In March 1999, Poland joined NATO and the Baltic States followed in 2004. This left K high and dry outside Russia, enclave turned exclave. The map shows this strange situation very clearly.
If you take a look at the map you'll notice three things of great strategic importance:
- how K is on the Baltic sea, with Russia's ice-free naval base in Baltiysk and a helicopter force at the Chkalovsk naval air base
- how K connects to Belarus and thus Russia along the Suwalki Corridor
- and how K is the border between Poland and Lithuania.
Kaliningrad is on the Baltic Sea, as we've seen, meaning that if American or NATO forces become involved, Russia would plant mines along the small passable straits and passageways, closing off the corridor to the Baltic Sea and preventing NATO troop movements into Russia.
The Suwałki Gap is of great strategic importance to Russia. If you take a look at the map again, you'll see that the Suwalki Gap is just 90 kilometers long and is the only way K can connect with Russia.
Whoever controls it, commands access to the Baltic states. If Russia, it would cut off the Baltic States geographically from their NATO allies. So Russia and Belarus could quickly overrun the Baltics in any horizontal escalation of this present Ukraine war, leaving NATO no time to defend them.
(Horizontal: spread geographically. Vertical: spread through chem and bio to nuclear.)
This is similar to the importance that attaches to Crimea. There are nine such easy-access gateways that Russia must control. Enemies have invaded in the past through these gateways, most notably Napoleon and Hitler and Russia must control them for its security. This is most of the explanation for today's troubles.
So now today, Kaliningrad is heavily militarised, in response to NATO taking in the countries mentioned above.
A very agreeable tour of Kaliningrad:
https://youtu.be/Y6M14rLIhV0
Kaliningrad could be where Putin retires to when this war is over. He keeps one of his yachts, the
''Graceful'' there too. It is there now, allegedly.....
Moscow has at least an entire division in Kaliningrad, 10,000-20,000 troops permanently stationed in the oblast.
America's plan would presumably be the color revolution (color, eh) idea again, although K's half million population is 85% ethnic Russian, repopulated after WW2. If prosperity is a stronger political force than nationalism, America could send in its advisors and NGOs to build up social and cultural ties between K's inhabitants and its NATO neighbours, give the people of K a strong desire to join the EU for prosperity and NATO for protection. But of course that could only happen once Russia is crippled and potential nuclear resistance overcome as a result of proceedings in the Ukraine theatre.
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