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    Home > Headlines > Poland and Baltic nations plan to withdraw from landmine convention
    Headlines

    Poland and Baltic nations plan to withdraw from landmine convention

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on March 18, 2025

    4 min read

    Last updated: January 24, 2026

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    Quick Summary

    Poland and Baltic nations plan to withdraw from the Ottawa Convention due to Russian threats, allowing them to stockpile landmines for defense.

    Poland and Baltic Nations to Exit Landmine Ban Treaty

    By Andrius Sytas and Barbara Erling

    VILNIUS/WARSAW (Reuters) -NATO members Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia plan to withdraw from the Ottawa convention banning anti-personnel landmines due to the military threat from their neighbour Russia, the four countries said on Tuesday.

    Quitting the 1997 treaty, which has been ratified or acceded to by more than 160 nations, will allow Poland and the three Baltic countries to start stockpiling and using landmines again.

    "Military threats to NATO member states bordering Russia and Belarus have significantly increased," the countries' defence ministers said in a joint statement.

    "With this decision we are sending a clear message: our countries are prepared and can use every necessary measure to defend our security needs."

    The planned withdrawal was done to allow the effective protection of the region's borders, Lithuanian Defence Minister Dovile Sakaliene said in a separate statement. All four countries share borders with Russia. Poland, Lithuania and Latvia also share borders with Moscow's ally Belarus.

    The announcement comes as Ukraine and Russia may be on the brink of concluding a 30-day ceasefire and may move towards a more permanent end to the three-year-old conflict sparked by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

    Poland and the Baltics are concerned that an end to the war in Ukraine could lead Russia to re-arm and target them instead. All four were under Moscow's dominion during the Cold War.

    GLOBAL DISARMAMENT

    The 1997 Ottawa Convention was one of a series of international agreements concluded after the end of the Cold War to encourage global disarmament. Anti-landmine campaigners won the Nobel Peace Prize that same year. Mines have killed or maimed tens of thousands of civilians across the globe, many of them long after conflicts have ended.

    Russia, the United States, China, India and Israel are among the countries who have not signed or ratified it.

    In 2008, the Convention on Cluster Munitions - explosive weapons that release smaller submunitions over a vast area - was adoted. Like landmines, they do not discriminate between combatants and civilians.

    The United States, which did not sign that convention, in 2023 transferred cluster munitions to Ukraine to help it defend itself against Russia.

    FINLAND COULD FOLLOW

    Other countries could follow Poland and the Baltics in using anti-personnel landmines again.

    Finland, the last EU state to sign the Ottawa Convention, in 2012, has said it was mulling pulling out of the treaty too, citing Russia's use of such weapons in Ukraine for the reason. Finland shares a 1,340 km (833 mile) border with Russia.

    "We have examined very closely through intelligence how Russia operates in Ukraine, specifically their mass use of infantry and also their mass use of mines," Finnish Defence Minister Antti Hakkanen told Reuters in December.

    "This infantry issue is one thing that argued for the fact that it's worth examining the use of anti-personnel mines," he said.

    The Finnish parliament's defence committee chair said on Tuesday the decision by Poland and the Baltics was "good and wise".

    "It is important that all NATO countries can assess their defence capabilities in accordance with the prevailing threat situation," Jukka Kopra said in a statement.

    Poland said it could withdraw from the Ottawa Convention by passing legislation through parliament and securing the president's approval, followed by formal notification to the U.N. The withdrawal would take effect six months later.

    In Estonia, the government needs to propose the law and parliament needs to vote on it, its foreign ministry said.

    (Reporting by Andrius Sytas in Vilnius, Barbara Erling and Alan Charlish in Warsaw, Anne Kauranen and Essi Lehto in Helsinki, writing by Gwladys Fouche, editing by Angus MacSwan and Terje Solsvik)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Poland and Baltic nations plan to exit the Ottawa Convention.
    • •Increased military threats from Russia cited as the reason.
    • •Withdrawal allows stockpiling and use of landmines.
    • •Finland may also consider exiting the treaty.
    • •The decision impacts NATO's defense strategy.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Poland and Baltic nations plan to withdraw from landmine convention

    1What is the main topic?

    The main topic is Poland and Baltic nations planning to withdraw from the Ottawa Convention on landmines due to military threats from Russia.

    2Why are these countries withdrawing?

    They cite increased military threats from Russia and Belarus as the reason for their withdrawal from the treaty.

    3What is the Ottawa Convention?

    The Ottawa Convention is a treaty banning the use of anti-personnel landmines, ratified by over 160 nations.

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