Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 23 – Moscow’s
decision, already taken, to “export instability” to Belarus shows that “the
post-Soviet era is over,” that the Kremlin is prepared to play for the highest
stakes across the entire former Soviet space, and that “the post-Soviet era is
over,” according to Yury Tsarik.
The Minsk analyst at the Minsk
Center for Strategic and Foreign Policy Research posted this argument not in Belarus
or in a Western outlet but rather on the Azeri Today portal, an indication of
just how sensitive the issues he is discussing are not only for Belarus but for
the entire post-Soviet space (azeri.today/articles/3719/).
Tsarik begins by observing that
Alyaksandr Lukashenka’s declaration last week that he has no intention of
ending cooperation with Russia in the military sphere because of differences
elsewhere represents “the local continuation of the foreign policy course”
Minsk has adopted since the beginning of the Ukrainian crisis.
“The essence of this course,” the
Minsk analyst says, “consists of playing the role of ‘a restraining ally’ with
Russia” by simultaneously remaining “a completely loyal participant” in
Moscow-led integration measures “and “not supporting the aggressive intentions
and plans of Moscow.”
That “gave Minsk a strategic
advantage” by allowing Lukashenka to avoid being attacked in Moscow for
disloyalty while continuing to find some support in the West for standing up to
the Kremlin. But Moscow has now figured
this out and has decided that it is time to bring Lukashenka and his regime to
heel.
“Moscow’s goal is the transformation
of Belarus into ‘a gray zone,’ a territory of instability, a source of risks
and threats for neighboring countries … and at the same time a
military-strategic place des armes for the Russian Federation in its conflicts
with the European Union and NATO.”
The Kremlin has two possible ways to
achieve that: It could potentially get agreement from the current Belarusian
regime to do what Moscow wants, or it could “destabilize Belarus and implement
control of its territory by hybrid means.”
Lukashenka has signaled that the first isn’t going to happen, and so
Moscow is now working toward the second, Tsarik says.
It is doing so by weakening the
Belarusian economy, launching propaganda attacks on Minsk, and tightening
control of the border between the two countries, the Belarusian analyst says,
in addition to other measures which so far have been mostly held in reserve.
The only real constraint on Moscow is that it doesn’t want to appear to be
behind the worsening of ties.
If Lukashenka behaves relatively
well, Moscow will ramp up the pressure “slowly.” If he doesn’t, Moscow will do
so “quickly.” But the important point is
this, Tsarik say: “the path back to the normalization of relations” between
Minsk and Moscow “no longer exists. Many in Minsk are still suffering illusions
about that.
Evidence of that sad fact, the Minsk
analyst continues, is the effort of some in the Belarusian capital to talk
about divisions within the Russian elite, seeking to play one group off against
another. That worked in 2010 to
Lukashenka’s advantage, but it will have disastrous consequences now.
Indeed, he says, “the use of it today, after the formation in Russia of ‘the
Crimean consensus’ is the crudest possible mistake.” Minsk looks like it is trying to undermine
the unity of Russian society and that is only intensifying “the anti-Belarusian
consensus among the Russian establishment.”
“At the same time, it is not
bringing any positive results either inside Belarus or in the international
arena. Rather just the reverse because for the international community it is
creating an impression that Minsk is only trading for better conditions within
Moscow’s sphere of influence and not struggling for real independence and
sovereignty.”
At one level, of course, none of
Lukashenka’s statements matters. “All the strategic decisions regarding Belarus
have already been taken in Moscow” and there is nothing that will change those
decisions. The only thing Minsk can try
to do is to maintain as much of its sovereignty and independence as possible
while it develops its economy.
“Belarus,” Tsarik says, “can count
only on its own forces, on its ability to modernize the economy, diversity its
foreign ties, build new coalitions, unions and partnerships, secure agreement
in society and internal stability, and defend its borders, territorial
integrity and constitutional order.”
If Minsk is able to do all this,
then “a new window of opportunity for the construction of a new type of relationship
with the Russian Federation on a genuinely equal civilized basis will arise in the
future.” And that will be a bellwether “for
all other countries of the post-Soviet space” because “the post-Soviet era has
come to an end.”
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