China likely on Nato agenda over ‘limitless’ Russia partnership, says Lithuanian foreign minister
- Baltic country’s Asia-Pacific allies may again attend transatlantic security alliance’s annual meeting, slated this year for Vilnius
- China ‘a significant part of conversation’ given possibility of weapons transfers to Russia, Gabrielius Landsbergis adds
Gabrielius Landsbergis said China would likely be individually cited for a second consecutive year at the annual Nato meeting, “especially if our Asia-Pacific partners join in the conversation”.
“I’m not sure whether they accepted the invitation, but maybe that’s in due time,” Landsbergis said of Lithuania’s Asia-Pacific allies in remarks at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, a bipartisan Washington think tank.
Lithuania has one of Europe’s most contentious relationships with China. The country became embroiled in a trade stand-off with Beijing after Vilnius agreed to allow the self-ruled island’s representative office in Lithuania to use the word “Taiwanese” in its name instead of other identifiers that Beijing finds less objectionable.