On March 18, 2025, defense chiefs from Poland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania jolted global headlines, pushing to abandon the Ottawa Convention.
They aim to deploy anti-personnel mines along borders with Russia and Belarus, undoing a 1997 ban on these lethal devices. The decision, triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, reveals a region torn between dread and defiance.
Russia’s campaign has left Ukraine riddled with mines, with cleanup costs estimated at $34.6 billion by the World Bank. Poland confronts 418 kilometers of Belarusian border and 232 kilometers near Russia’s Kaliningrad, while the Baltic states face a tense 1,200-kilometer frontier.
Moscow, free from the treaty’s constraints, uses mines widely in Ukraine, a capability these nations now seek. Belarus, hosting Russian forces and nuclear weapons, heightens the stakes further.
Poland pledges to produce a million mines for its “East Shield” defense, targeting late 2025 pending parliamentary nods. Latvia considers manufacturing, Estonia aligns but waits, and Lithuania, fresh off scrapping a cluster bomb ban, presses forward.
Eastern Europe’s Military Shift
Russia’s 200,000-troop Zapad-2021 exercises and NATO’s alerts of a possible Article 5 test within years drive their haste. Yet, skeptics note no direct attack looms, suggesting Soviet-era wounds amplify today’s fears.
Lawmakers need months to approve, plus a six-month UN exit window, delaying full rollout to 2026. Finland mulls joining, while Germany weighs arms production shifts.
Poland’s troop boost to 500,000 reflects a turn from disarmament—Spain once destroyed 3.4 million Soviet mines in Belarus—to rearmament. Critics highlight mines’ civilian risks, but the ministers vow to uphold humanitarian laws.
Defense industries spot growth as output surges, though the move risks straining treaty allies and provoking Moscow, which claims NATO stokes the fire.
The numbers tell a stark story: nations beside a formidable power, arming for survival with tools as perilous as they are potent. They stake everything on deterrence, challenging a tense world to respond.