We unveil our new look

The subtitle for this column ought to be “What I Did on My Spring Vacation.” While students at the university where I teach were off to places like Florida and Mexico, I hid out at home, finalizing the new design for Latvians Online. The result—still a work in progress—is before you. Here’s a look behind the computer screen at what we’ve done and why.

We began discussing the next steps for Latvians Online last autumn. The site has continued to grow, even though the small core of people who work on it has found itself increasingly pressed for resources. We realized it was time to streamline operations, spruce up the look and functionality of our Web site, and find more efficient ways to continue to produce the news, features and other content our readers find valuable. Our recent reader survey confirmed some of our ideas about our future direction, as well as pointing out areas where we need to improve.

One of the first decisions we made was that we need to adopt a content management system, or CMS. Without getting too technical, most everything you’ve seen on Latvians Online over the past three years has been “hand coded”—each page put together with text processing software before being uploaded to our server. Now many of our pages will be driven by a database, allowing content to be updated faster and used to greater benefit by our readers.

Another decision we made was to adopt a leading-edge approach to the design of our site. We’re now using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), rather than tables, to define how content should be displayed on a page. What that should mean for most readers is that our pages will load much faster. For the Web-savvy among you, it means the door has been opened for us to present our content across various media with little effort.

Using this approach admittedly is a bit risky, because not all browsers fully or correctly support CSS. If you’re using a browser that’s at version 4.0 or earlier, you should consider upgrading—and not only so Latvians Online pages display properly. Most of our readers, according to our statistics, should experience few if any problems.

We’ve added some features that have been requested by readers, plus some we thought were worthwhile:

  • When reading an article, you can now click links to view a printer-friendly version or to e-mail the article to yourself or someone else.
  • Want to comment on an article? Each article now features a space for leaving your thoughts.
  • On our home page, we’ve tapped into the nightly news headlines from Latvian state television’s “Panorāma” newscast. Clicking on a headline will take you to the “Panorāma” Web site. Other Latvian news sources will be added in the future.
  • We’re starting a FAQ (frequently asked questions) section. Hardly a day goes by when we don’t get a request for information, such as how to find a long-lost Latvian friend, where to get background for a class project on Latvia, or what to see when visiting Latvia. We can’t answer all questions, but perhaps the FAQ will point some folks to places to get the information they need.

Other improvements are on their way, including a better online store and a better forum format. In the meantime, bear with us in the weeks to come as we tweak the site and move more of our past articles into the database. If you don’t find something you need right away, e-mail me at editor@latviansonline.com and we’ll try to help you.

Other updates

Here in the northern hemisphere, it’s finally spring. And while we renew ourselves, we’re pleased to note that two of our friends are also updating their Web sites.

First, Editor Māra Gulēna and her crew at the biweekly e-zine Toronto Ziņas have unleashed a new look to their Web site. See it at torontozinas.com.

Second, the Latvian Institute in Rīga—an organization led by Ojārs Kalniņš, formerly Latvia’s ambassador to the United States—is accepting proposals in its Web site redesign contest. I’m tempted to send in an entry, but right now I need to get some sleep. My vacation is over.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Latvia officially joins NATO alliance

Barely three weeks into his job as Latvia’s new prime minister, Indulis Emsis already has a place secured for himself in the history books. It will be under his watch that Latvia formally joined the NATO defense alliance. (And, if his government survives for at least another month, his administration may also get credited for being in power when the country joined the European Union.)

Emsis and new Latvian Defense Minister Atis Slakteris joined leaders from six other Eastern European nations in a March 29 afternoon ceremony at the White House in Washington, D.C. Besides Latvia, joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization are Bulgaria, Estonia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia. Also present at the White House ceremony were representatives from Albania, Croatia and Macedonia, which are still seeking NATO membership.

“Our seven new members have built free institutions, they’ve increased their military capabilities in the span of a decade,” U.S. President George W. Bush said during the ceremony, according to a transcript of his speech. “They are stronger nations because of that remarkable effort—and the NATO alliance is made stronger by their presence.”

Earlier, Emsis had delivered his country’s NATO accession documents to the U.S. State Department. The United States is the official depository for NATO documents.

Another ceremony was scheduled April 2 at NATO Headquarters in Brussels.

The festivities come amidst renewed interethnic conflict in Kosovo, fears of large-scale terrorism and a still smoldering rift between various European countries and the United States about the war in Iraq—all issues that may have some effect on NATO’s future. Meanwhile, some Russian politicians are heating up their criticisms of Latvia’s and Estonia’s policies toward their ethnic Russian populations. At the same time, NATO jet fighters are to begin patrollling the skies over the Baltics, giving the defense alliance its farthest reach ever to the east.

Latvia and the other nations were asked to join NATO in November 2002.

The road to joining NATO and the European Union—two icons of Western Europe—has been a long one, stretching almost from the third week of August 1991, when Latvia regained its independence after a half century of Soviet occupation. The process has required Latvia to reform its laws and military structure to meet NATO requirements. Latvia also bumped up its defense budget to 2 percent of gross domestic product, for a total of more than LVL 110 million.

Along the way, both homegrown opposition and external pressure have raised questions about whether and why Latvia should join. At home, some critics have said Latvia is giving up too much by joining the defense alliance and the economic club, a few comparing the move as simply replacing one “union” with another. Ironically, Web surfers entering “nato.lv” in their browser on the chance that they will find information about Latvia and the defense alliance arrive instead at an anti-NATO and anti-EU site.

Externally, opposition came from both the east and the west, but none have continued to be as forceful as Russia.

“The present round of expansion is characterized by the fact that the Baltic states are joining NATO in the conditions of the unsettledness of a whole set of problems still lingering in their relations with Russia,” Alexander Yakovenko, spokesman for Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said in March 29 statement.

Although Russian President Vladimir Putin at one point conceded that the Baltics could join the defense alliance, others have kept up the war of words, usually hitting on Latvia’s and Estonia’s relationship with their Russian-speaking populations.

Also of concern to Russia, Yakovenko said, is that Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania are not yet signatories to the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe. The CFE Treaty, signed in 1990, is an agreement between NATO states and former Warsaw Pact states to limit nonnuclear weapons such as tanks, artillery and aircraft.

Most recently, a former Russian air force general said his country should down NATO planes if they stray over the border from the Baltics.

The first of those planes—four F16s—left Belgium on March 29 and flew to the Siauliai air base Lithuania, from where they will commence patrolling Baltic skies, according to the Belgian Ministry of Defense. In early March, a NATO-grade radar system was activated at Audriņi in eastern Latvia, according to the Latvian Ministry of Defense. The radar has a range of 450 kilometers.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

With document handoff, Latvia joins NATO

Latvian Prime Minister Indulis Emsis submitted his nation’s NATO accession documents to the U.S. State Department on March 29 in Washington, D.C., making official Latvia’s entry into the defense alliance. The United States is the official repository for NATO documents.

Emsis, along with Defense Minister Atis Slakteris and other Latvian officials, then headed off to a White House ceremong to celebrate with U.S. President George W. Bush and leaders from six other nations, according to a statement from the White House. Besides Latvia, the other new members of NATO are Bulgaria, Estonia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia.

Members of the local Latvian community also were present at the ceremony.

Before returning home, Slakteris is scheduled to meet with U.S. and NATO military officials to discuss Latvia’s role in the defense alliance, according to a press release from the Latvian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

A ceremony at NATO headquarters in Brussels, which will include raising the Latvian flag, is scheduled April 2.

NATO now stands at 26 member states, including Canada and the United States, as well as much of Europe.

Latvia’s permanent representative to NATO is Imants Viesturs Lieģis, who was born and raised in the Latvian exile community in the United Kingdom.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.