Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 18 – In the past,
Moscow has provided significant aid to Minsk in advance of Alyaksandr
Lukashenka’s re-election campaigns, allowing him to boost salaries and public
spending and thus win support from the population. But this year, when Moscow
wants something from him, it isn’t providing such assistance, Rygor Astepenya
says.
The head of the Minsk Center for New
Ideas says that the Russian side’s failure to provide such assistance is one of
the major reasons why, all the talk about “deeper integration” between Russia
and Belarus has not led to progress (thinktanks.by/publication/2019/12/19/rygor-astapenya-god-pokazal-chto-minsk-sovsem-ne-hochet-bolshogo-sblizheniya-s-rossiey.html).
In fact, the Belarusian analyst
continues, research he and his colleagues have conducted shows, that “nothing
is happening” to resolve the fundamental issues and that all announced progress
toward integration has been just that, talk. Moscow isn’t helping Lukashenka
and so Lukashenka isn’t prepared to help Moscow get what it wants.
Instead of helping Lukashenka, Astepenya
says, Russia seems committed to adding to his difficulties because now any
problems the Belarusian leader faces work to Moscow’s benefit in it opinion. At
the same time, however, the analyst expresses doubt that the Kremlin was behind
the Deutsche Welle film about the murder of Belarusian politicians in
the 1990s.
Had that film appeared just before
some Western leader was scheduled to visit Minsk, the situation would be
different; but its timing, the Belarusian analyst says, casts doubt that Moscow
had a hand in it.
But Astepenya’s words suggest that
Moscow has decided to shift from carrots to sticks in dealing with Lukashenka,
something that may prove counterproductive, particularly if the sticks it uses
suggest to the Belarusian leader that he cannot count on Moscow to keep any
promises it may be making about his own future.
As a result, Lukashenka may simply
dig it, seeking allies abroad and even at home; and plans for a new union state
are likely to be effectively put on hold for some time to come.
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