VILNIUS: Lithuania’s parliamentary parties have agreed on a plan to lift a constitutional ban on nuclear weapons and foreign military ​bases in the Baltic nation, the president said, in a sign of how Russia is resetting security calculations in the region.

The move — a major legal overhaul which will need two-thirds majorities in two parliamentary votes to go through — would remove prohibitions put in place more than three decades ago after Lithuania broke away from the Soviet Union.

“The geopolitical situation is getting worse,” ‌President Gitanas Nauseda told ‌reporters after meeting with parliament party leaders ​on ‌Thursday.

“Our ⁠constitution ​was written ⁠when geopolitical circumstances were totally different.”

Lithuania — a NATO member which shares land borders with the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad and with Moscow’s ally Belarus — has tripled its defense spending since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.