Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 16 – The editors of Moscow’s
Nezavisimaya gazeta say in a lead article that Belarusian leader Alyaksandr
Lukashenka by his resistance to the realization of the union state with Russia has
“given a push to the process of distancing themselves not just Belarus” but all
other post-Soviet states as well.
The Union State agreement has not
been formally denounced, the paper notes; but experts are already saying that “the
Union State is no more” and that this won’t change regardless of who wins the
presidential election in Belarus because all the candidates want their country
to be independent (ng.ru/editorial/2020-06-16/2_7886_editorial.html).
Al the candidates want Belarus to
have friendly relations with Russia but “neighborly ones” rather than the
shackles of being part of “a single union state.” They are committed to living and developing
in their own home rather than having that “home” absorbed by someone else, in
this case, Moscow.
“Belarus is changing,” the editors
say. President Alyaksandr Lukashenka has not taken note of this” because he is
trapped in the words of one analyst in “the perestroika-Soviet period.’” But Moscow is similarly trapped and continues
to see in Belarus “the member of a single Union State together with the Russian
Federation.”
But if the leaders do not understand
that the world has changed, the citizens of Belarus do. They want changes, including a change in
relations with Russia, from those with a country that wants to absorb their own
into a neighbor which will live with a Belarus that looks westward as well as
eastward.
Such emerging attitudes are not
unique to the Belarus-Russian relationship, Nezavisimaya gazeta says. “The
Union State is not the only integration structure on the post-Soviet space
which is showing its unsteady quality.”
Kyrgyzstan, another country Moscow
felt it could always count on, is threatening the Eurasian-Economic Union
because that entity cannot overrule Kazakhstan on the restricts Nur-Sultan has
imposed on Kyrgyz transportation. And
its challenge is calling into question the value of the Union there.
What this all means, the paper says,
suggesting that there are other examples of this trend as well, is that the
best Moscow can hope for is “a drawn-out” pause in its plans for
integration. At present, things are
flowing in the opposite direction; and by trying to promote unity on its terms,
the center is only exacerbating this development.
No comments:
Post a Comment