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.

Opinion | Mindaugas Sinkevičius, the incoming prime minister of Lithuania, said on June 30 that he supports removing from the country’s Constitution the ban on stationing weapons…

Lithuania’s top political leaders have agreed that the country’s constitutional ban on the deployment of nuclear weapons...

Lithuania to lift its nuclear weapons ban, aligning with NATO strategy. NATO-Russia military clash by December 31, 2026 at 16.5% YES.

Lithuania agrees to remove its constitutional ban on nuclear weapons as officials confirm talks with the US about potentially hosting American nuclear arms.

The decision comes shortly after lawmakers in Finland voted to lift its longstanding ban on nuclear weapons.

President Gitanas Nauseda, Acting Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene, designated Prime Minister Mindaugas Sinkevicius, Defense Minister Robertas Kaunas and Speaker of the Seimas Juozas…

Lithuania is considering removing a constitutional provision that prohibits the deployment of weapons of mass destruction on its territory, following remarks by the country's…

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…

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…

Robertas Kaunas said that prohibition of nuclear weapons prevents Lithuania from making full use of NATO's defense capabilities