Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 10 – Having
suffered increasingly obvious “fiascos” in Ukraine and Syria, Vladimir Putin now
needs “a victory,” Dmitry Oreskhin says. “And it turns out that Belarus and
Lukashenka are the most suitable variant whom he could defeat with minimal
costs” because “Belarus could not hold out for two weeks” if Moscow moved
against it.
In an interview with RFE/RL’s
Belarusian Service, the Russian political analyst says his conclusion reflects
not what “fascist and nationalist groups” in Russia want – their influence on
the Kremlin is minimal – but on Putin’s needs, something “much more serious
than aggressive young people who take part in Russian Marches” (svaboda.org/content/article/27353597.html).
According to Oreshkin, “Putin is
seeking a formula which will allow him to justify his remaining in power
without any change. The formulas can be various: opposition to the West, ingatheringn
of the Russian lands, the restoration of the USSR – something that will create
a crisis situation so that people won’t be inclined to change horses in the
middle of a stream.”
“During the last two years, such a
crisis situation was created in the east of Ukraine, as a result of which Putin’s
ratings in Russia strongly rose,” Oreshkin says. “But now people are beginning
quietly to understand that things haven’t worked out as planned: Ukraine hasn’t
joined the Eurasian Union, many people have been killed and Ukraine is moving
toward Europe.”
Now it appears to them that
Belarusian leader Alyaksandr Lukashenka is also turning toward Europe because
he needs money, and “everyone understands that Putin doesn’t have any.”
Lukashenka has refused to agree to the opening of a Russian base there, and
that has left Putin in a cold fury,” the Russian analyst says.
Everywhere he looks, Putin sees “fiascos”
in Ukraine and in Syria “where the more involved he gets the more obvious that
will be,” with Russians “gradually beginning to understand that someone blew up
the airliner and the tragic losses of life as a result are “somehow connected
with Syria.”
Consequently, Putin needs a victory,
Oreshkin concludes, and Belarus and Lukashenka are “the most suitable”
candidates that could give him one, especially since Moscow could overthrow the
one and occupy the latter at “minimal cost.”
If the Kremlin leader sends in the Russian army, “Belarus would not hold
out for even two weeks.”
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