Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 15 – Russian agents
in the Belarusian security services along with Russian agents in the blogosphere
are calling on Alyaksandr Lukashenka not to make any concessions to the
protesters but rather to crack down hard as he did in 2010, according to Minsk
analysts.
Such an action would not only
completely block any possibility that Lukashenka could achieve a further
rapprochement with the West and thus force Minsk back into Moscow’s tight
embrace but also spark the kind of clashes that the Russian government could
use to justify armed intervention in Belarus.
Analysts at the Minsk Center for Strategic
and Foreign Policy Research have released a new study arguing that “the special
services are misinforming [Lukashenka] by playing on his fears of ‘a Ukrainian
trace’ in the protests” and thus blocking any concessions and pushing him
toward a crackdown.
(For the Center’s Crisis Watch report on
this subject, see csfps.by/new-research/ukrainskiy-sled-i-otkrytaya-dezinformaciya;
for a discussion of its content and other actions by pro-Moscow forces inside
Belarus, see Dmitry Galko’s survey on the BelarusPartisan portal at belaruspartisan.org/politic/373563/.)
According to Galko, one can conclude on
the basis of the center’s report that Lukashenka “is ready to make some wise
steps and concessions in the existing situation to lower social tension. But
there exists a certain force which is leading him in the opposite direction by
suggesting the fake danger in the form of ‘a Ukrainian scenario.’”
Some of these people are located in the
Belarusian force structures. Others are involved at the edges of the protests.
But the fundamental message is the same as it was in December 2010 when
pro-Moscow groups told Lukashenka that he had no choice but to crack down given
when Moscow would do if he didn’t.
This message, the center suggests and
Galko confirms, is “direct disinformation” intended to push Lukashenka toward
the abyss because a crackdown of the kind the pro-Moscow forces want would lead
to one of several disasters ranging from violence inside the country to Russian
intervention.
Avoiding
those outcomes, Galko says, is in the interest not only of Lukashenka but also
of the opposition because “an attempt to repeat the scenario of December 2010 this
time can grow into a Romanian scenario” and then to “hybrid aggression” by
Russia of the kind it has been using in Ukraine’s Donbass. “This scenario is
being prepared,” he says.
Galko makes an
additional contribution by analyzing posts on the Tuneyadets.by social group (ok.ru/group/53457858920638). That is a pro-Moscow group consisting largely
or exclusively of Russians from Russia that is pushing Moscow’s line at the
expense of Belarus and adding to the pressures on Lukashenka.
But the far greater threat comes
from Russian agents inside the Belarusian government, he and the center’s
report suggest. “If one considers that in the leadership of the Belarusian special
services are certain overt or covert agents of the Kremlin, the situation is
becoming extremely explosive.”
“It is possible,” Galko says, “that
we are standing at the brink of attempts to carry out hybrid aggression against
our country.” And he ends by concluding
with the words of Maksim Filipovich, the opposition figure who was arrested in
full view of the television audience: “Aleksandr Grigoryevich [Lukashenka] what
are you creating?”
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