Baltic Treaty (Mannerheim's Finland)

The Baltic Treaty known formally as the Treaty of Baltic States was a military and political alliance between the and the Republics of,  and. The treaty was initially drafted during a conference in Tallinn. This was in response to the end of the Russian Civil War and the fear of Soviet expansionism. All four nations had previously been part of the Russian Empire and following the events of the Great War and it's conclusive independence conflicts each had become a sovereign state in it's own right.

Initially the treaty was drafted soley as a military alliance or moreso as a collective defensive movement in which if any member of the alliance were to be invaded, the other members would come to it's defence and join any said conflict unanmiously. Lithuania was initially hesistant to sign the treaty due to the recent loss of it's capital of Vilnius to Poland and debated in itself that it was an attack of aggression on Poland's part and therefore should retroactively be dealt with by the alliance.

During the week of conference, further ammendments were made to the treaty in order for it to include economic-political significance. In the second section, the states agreed that a unified currency would be used in the confederacy and was concluded to be the Baltic Markka based on the Finnish Markka. Furthermore, peoples across the confederacy would have free access of movement and travel between the said sovereign states.