Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 26 – Vladimir Putin’s imposition of Mikhail Babich as his man in Minsk
has already been declared a serious defeat for Alyaksandr Lukashenka and his
country (svaboda.org/a/29451529.html, svaboda.org/a/29451683.html and eurasia.expert/o-chem-lukashenko-govoril-s-putinym-v-sochi-kommentarii-belorusskikh-ekspertov/).
But
this action may have even more profound and widespread consequences, Russian
nationalist commentator Yury Baranchik says, marking a new departure for Moscow’s
policy toward the CIS and even “the ingathering of lands” of those countries “beginning
with Belarus” (iarex.ru/articles/59575.html).
The way Babich was imposed on
Belarus “undoubtedly is a turning point not only in Belarusian-Russian
relations,” the commentator says; but it is also for Russian policy in the
entire post-Soviet space. As such, it merits particular attention.
Even the formalities of the
appointment show this, he says. Putin appointed Babich rather than Babich being
received by Lukashenka and the Kremlin leader imposed not only an ambassador
but simultaneously someone with the status of a special representative of the
Russian president
“This is only the third such case, with the two previous
being in Ukraine, with Viktor Chernomyrdin and Mikhail Zurabov. Given how things have developed in that
country, it is obvious that what Putin has done is absolutely “correct,”
especially given the recent deterioration of relations between Moscow and
Minsk.
“However,
the most important aspect of this situation consists not so much in the foreign
policy realm as in the domestic Russian one, since the post of special
representative in fact has great important not in foreign but in domestic
policy,” Baranchik says.
“The
status of special representative says that Moscow needed an effective
anti-crisis coordinator of Russian interests and lobbyists in the Belarusian
direction,” something it clearly has not had in Minsk up to now. Someone who is
only an ambassador cannot hope to play that role.
Given
his status as a special representative, the new ambassador in fact gets out
from under the Russian foreign ministry and puts him on a level with a minister
or even a deputy prime minister, Baranchik says, thus making him the key player
in the Belarusian direction for Russian firms and institutions.
The
Russian commentator then lists eight changes which Babich’s appointment
represents, changes which he says should now “become a model for relations of all the republics of the former Soviet Union.”
(emphasis supplied)
·
First, Babich’s appointment marks “the end of
an era of Russian powerlessness” in Belarus. Now all Belarusians know that opposing
Russian interests or challenge Moscow’s position not only is to oppose Putin
but to put themselves at risk of losing their positions.
·
Second, his appointment will strengthen
Lukashenka’s hand in dealing with his subordinates who no longer fear him or
fear Moscow and thus are looking to the West instead. Babich will stiffen
Lukashenka’s spine in enforcing discipline.
·
Third, Babich will in time also oversee the “upcoming
transition of power” in Minsk in which Lukashenka will be replaced by someone
more loyal to Moscow.
·
Fourth, Babich will also help to “impose
order in the ideological sphere” in Belarus and mobilize the population there to
back the Moscow-Minsk agenda.
·
Fifth, the new appointment shows that “Moscow
is finally in a position and is ready to carry out an active foreign policy
line on the post-Soviet space.” It is moving in Belarus first for obvious
reasons but will move in similar fashion elsewhere in the future.
·
Sixth, Babich, given his experience with the
oil and gas corporations in the Volga Federal District will work quickly to
resolve controversies about both transit and the supply of energy resources to
Belarus. Critically, Baranchik says,, he will work to ensure that Belarus
becomes economically profitable economically and no longer require Moscow
subsidies.
·
Seventh, Babich will coordinate closer
military-political ties to cope with “threats to Belarus from the north, west,
and south.”
·
And eighth, Babich will give a new impulse to
the development of the Union State so that its integration becomes real and not
just declarative, again “a model for relations” between Moscow and “all the
republics of the former Soviet Union.”
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