“By saying ‘thank you’ today not for what happened back then but for what takes place now, we express our firm commitment that we feel a very strong shoulder of our allies. We do not have a slightest doubt in our safety and freedom,” Lithuania’s Foreign Minister Linas Linkevičius said.
“By saying ‘thank you’ for the policy of non-recognition, we also thank for the hope that kept us going for the decades. By ‘thank you’ for the non-recognition policy, we also mean what happens today, as the policy is much needed in a certain part of Georgia and Ukraine,” the diplomacy chief added.
Lithuania’s former president Valdas Adamkus who had spend decades in exile in the United States emphasized that “America kept its word by refusing to recognize Lithuania’s occupation for 50 years and allowing operations of our diplomatic services.”
“Today when we are free and independent, however, alarming voices are heard from the Kremlin, we feel the importance and help from the United States,” said Adamkus.
“It is always bright here and it feels good, I cannot remember any thunder, rainfall or taint from the skies or from hearts on this special day. It always feels good to be here,” Lithuania’s first post-independence leader Vytautas Landsbergis said in his address to the crowd gathered in the Washington Square on Thursday evening.
Traditionally, the flags of the three Baltic countries and the US were hoisted, with the Lithuanian and US national anthems playing in the background.
American food, including burgers and doughnuts, was sold during the event, which included a concert after the official ceremony.
Acting US Secretary of State Sumner Welles on Jul. 23, 1940 issued a diplomatic statement refusing to recognize the annexation of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. The document marked the beginning of the US policy of non-recognition of the occupation of the Baltic nations.
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