Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 25 – In yet another indication that Vladimir Putin is driving away
even those countries in the post-Soviet space that he assumes are inevitably on
his side, Alyaksandr Lukashenka says that he will cease to call Russia “a
fraternal state” because that is now how Russia sees things.
The
two countries, the Belarusian leader said yesterday, remain “partners;” but in
the Russian political lexicon, that is a much more distant and variable
relationship than the former (president.gov.by/ru/news_ru/view/soveschanie-po-aktualnym-voprosam-sotrudnichestva-s-rossiej-20124/).
Tensions
between Moscow and Minsk have been rising of late, with Belarusians expressing
their commitment to remain independent of Russia regardless of their need for subsidies
from Moscow and Russians expressing anger that Minsk insist on such
independence given that the two countries are at least nominally part of a “union
state.”
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