Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 21 – Yesterday, the
Duma committee on CIS affairs approved the candidacy of Mikhail Babich, the
presidential plenipotentiary in the Volga Federal District, to be Russian ambassador
to Belarus; but now Minsk must give its assent or agrément. And there may be
a problem, Moscow’s Kommersant says
today.
In an article entitled “The Extraordinary and Plenipotentary
Political Representative,” the paper’s
Viktor Khamrayev and Marina Tsareva point out that in August 2016, the
Ukrainian government refused to accept Mikhail Babich because of the KGB and
FSB past and that the Belarusian authorities could do the same (kommersant.ru/doc/3693848).
Because of his
past connections, Mikhail Vinogradov of the Petersburg Politics Foundation
says, Babich “is much more influential than a regular diplomat, has access to
the top people, and knows how everything is done in the corridors of Russian
power.” Belarus should thus welcome him,
he suggests.
However,
others are less certain not only because of the reasons Kyiv had for rejecting
him and the possibility that he will conduct himself less as an ambassador than
a pro-consul but also because for Babich who is known to have wanted to become
a deputy Russian prime minister overseeing the defense industry this may be a demotion
and act accordingly.
In
Soviet times,” Kirill Koktysh of MGIMO tells Kommersant, shifts from party work to diplomatic service frequently
represented a form of exile. But he adds that Babich is “a practical politician
and a tough negotiator,” something that will mean the joint Russian-Belarusian
business projects will increase.” If that happens, it could boost Babich back
in Moscow.
According
to Moscow political analyst Yevgeny Minchenko, Babich “will be not simply an ambassador
in Belarus but someone responsible for the CIS as a whole,” while Vladimir
Zharikhin of the Moscow Institute for CIS Countries says that “relations
between Russia and Belarus are set not at the ambassadorial level but at the
presidential one.”
“Therefore,”
Zharikhin says, “the political ‘role of ambassador Babich will be minimal. His
primary work will be cooperation with business circles, links with society, and
the establishment of a circle of sympathizers around the embassy.” Whether
Minsk will view this as all he is likely to be involved with remains to be
seen.
(For more background and a broader
discussion of this case, see the current writer’s “Putin Names FSB Officer to
be New Ambassador to Belarus,” Jamestown
Commentaries, July 20, 2018 at jamestown.org/putin-names-fsb-officer-to-be-new-ambassador-to-belarus/.)
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