I totally agree with the above statement, and believe that it's actually very good news for the country of Lithuania and the future of Lithuanian figure skating that they will be sending Paulina R./Deividas K. instead of Reed/Ambrulevicius. Here's why...
There's a long history of non-Lithuanian female ice dancers skating with LTU males and attempting to get the citizenship for the Olympics, of which most attempts were denied. Lithuania is one of those countries where getting citizenship is by law, very difficult. In the past, American Isabella Tobias, who skated with a LTU ice dancer, tried also to obtain LTU citizenship. In preparation for the citizenship application, she took years of Lithuanian language classes, took and passed the history/citizenship test given by the LTU Citizenship Commission (all answers had to be answered verbally in Lithuanian), and passed the language test. Tobias also was very loved by the Lithuanian people and press. In fact, the Lithuanian people rallied, protested, and obtained many signatures on a petition on her behalf as a way to persuade the President to give her citizenship to compete in the Olympics! Tobias also obtained a Lithuanian lawyer during this process. Reed, on the other hand, has done none of this. It also does not help Reed's case that she has competed for the country of Georgia in the 2010 Olympics and has skated for Israel. After Tobias obtained citizenship and competed in the 2014 Olympics for LTU, her Lithuanian partner retired. Then Tobias skated for Israel with another man, and her Lithuanian citizenship was stripped from her in 2016. The Lithuanian public reacted to this in anger and betrayal due to all they had done to support and rally for Tobias. Lithuania still remembers this incident, which is probably another reason citizenship was not granted to Reed. The sad part about this is that Reed/Ambrulevicius didn't seem to do anything to prepare for citizenship application, besides just skate and visit the country. Sadly, it seems they didn't fully understand the citizenship laws of the country they skated for. Unless the citizenships laws of Lithuania change, this will be an ongoing problem. The solution? Sending the younger, full blooded Lithuanian ice dance team of Paulina/Deividas. They will be making history as the first true Lithuanian ice dance team to compete at the Olympics. THIS will be good for Lithuania. This will inspire LITHUANIAN skaters! Hopefully this will break the heartbreaking cycle where the female is continuously denied citizenship and move forward where the male/female of an ice dance time are both Lithuanian! In the short term, this is a harsh reality, but long term, this is actually what's best for the country and LTU skating.