One more for ‘the Gipper’

  • 2011-02-16
  • From wire reports

TALLINN - At the seminar dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the birth of Ronald Reagan, Estonian Foreign Minister Urmas Paet emphasized that the role that the 40th president of the United States had in history was made special by his firm belief in the value of freedom and democracy and his goal to help other nations, including Estonia, share in these values, reports news agency LETA. “Reagan saw clearly that the peoples of Eastern Europe did not want to live under foreign rule and decided to help them be freed from this rule,” he stated.

In his speech, Paet highlighted President Reagan’s actions that helped lead to the collapse of the Soviet Union. “He expressed clear and unambiguous support for the efforts of Estonia and other European peoples to achieve national independence, regardless of the nation’s size or its location in a complicated geopolitical area,” said Paet. “The U.S. government listened and was ready to help the representatives of all peoples under totalitarian regimes.”

Paet said that for the people of Estonia and other European nations yearning for freedom, it was very important that the government of the U.S. supported European peoples’ right to freedom. “For us, this was clearly expressed by the Welles Declaration on the non-recognition of the annexation, signed in 1940,” Paet noted. “Since then, all presidents of the United States used this declaration as a basis, although prospects for actually carrying it out were insignificant for decades.”

Today, Europe is more stable and secure than it has been for many generations in the past, and Foreign Minister Paet stated that the United States has made a great contribution to help this happen. “Unfortunately, not all European nations have the opportunity today to appreciate freedom. For some, freedom is forbidden; some would like to be free but are deterred by the difficulties of transitioning to democracy,” stated Paet. “Europe and America are very reliable partners to each other, and they give hope to those who are not yet free.”