Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 31 –Belarusians are
now being trained in a camp in Russia that is headed by an openly fascist Russian
nationalist, an arrangement that Moscow might exploit against Minsk by claiming
there are “extreme Belarusian nationalists” that the Russians must intervene to
put down and one that could be a model for Kremlin actions in other post-Soviet
states.
The commandant of the camp, Aleksey
Milchakov, has confirmed to RFE/RL’s Belarusian Service that young Belarusians are
there now (svaboda.org/a/27742409.html). And as Kseniya Kirillova, a US-based Russian
journalist points out, Milchakov has never concealed his neo-Nazi sympathies (ru.krymr.com/content/article/27765937.html).
She notes that he has frequently
been photographed with flags displaying the swastika and as a commander of the
pro-Moscow “Rusich” brigade in the Donbass proudly showed himself to be a
killer of Ukrainians (eotperm.ru/?p=2760).
At the same time, he has demonstrated that he is ever more closely tied with
the Russian government.
According to Kirillova, this
rapprochement rose to “a qualitatively new level” when Michalkov took part in a
meeting with Vladislav Surkov, Putin’s troubleshooter, and received a reward
from Sergey Aksyonov, the head of the Russian occupation administration in
Crimea (eotperm.ru/?p=4961).
Officials in the Belarusian capital
are thus increasingly concerned about “the attempt to involve [Belarusian]
young people in the latest neo-Nazi project of ‘the Russian world.’” Indeed, Yury Tsarik of Minsk’s Center for
Strategic and Foreign Policy Research says the expert community is taking this
latest Russian action “quite seriously.”
For many years, Tsarik says, there
have been Belarusian young people involved in patriotic camps inside Belarus.
But “before the war in Ukraine, the situation didn’t generate particular
worries.” Now, however, these camps are suspect and even more suspect are camps
in Russia where Belarusians are being trained.
Not only are such trainees being
told that Belarus and other post-Soviet states are simply accidents of history
that must be corrected, the Minsk researcher says; but there are real fears
that they could be used directly or indirectly to undermine Belarusian
sovereignty, either as shock troops for Russia or as supposed radicals Moscow
might use to justify intervention.
Concerns are especially great now,
Tsarik says, because Belarus is exploring closer ties with the West and Moscow
will do whatever it can to block them.
As a result, the use of “hard” power now cannot be excluded, and many
errors could be committed that could trigger a disaster.
No comments:
Post a Comment