Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 22 – After years of
relative stability in the leaderships of the post-Soviet space, many have now
gone through a change in the occupant of the top job. The scenarios ranged from
violent ones like in Ukraine where there was a radical change of course to
relatively peaceful ones like in Armenia where the changes have been less
thoroughgoing.
According to Fyodor Lukyanov, the
editor of Russia in Global Affairs and one of the most prominent foreign policy
commentators in Moscow, the transition in Belarus might go in any of these
directions but is most likely to follow the course seen in Armenia rather than
that in Ukraine (profile.ru/abroad/minskaya-krepost-process-peremen-podobralsya-k-belorussii-346268/).
Lukashenka doesn’t have any plan to
yield his position easily, and he has demonstrated for years that he is quite capable
of maneuvering far more capably than many have thought possible even when he is
in a tight situation, the commentator says. But this time may be different,
although even now, the situation in Belarus has many unique features.
However, the things that make the transition
situation in Belarus more like that in Armenia than in Ukraine are critical:
First, Minsk like Yerevan really does not have any option but to maintain in
the Russian sphere of influence. Second, the West is far less interested in and
focused on Belarus than it was Ukraine and views Lukashenka with distaste.
And third, and this may be the most
important factor of all, Lukyanov says, Belarus is both a sovereign state and
part of the Russian-led Union state. For all of the Belarusian president’s complaints
about Moscow and Putin, the Union state gives him certain advantages that his
successors will likely want to take advantage of as well.
The real wild card in this situation,
Lukyanov says, is Moscow. It is not simply that Lukashenka has annoyed Putin by
his antics. Moscow has changed its approach to the former Soviet
republics. Influenced by Donald Trump’s
mercantilism, the Kremlin sees ever less reason to view them as anything but
foreign countries that either help or hurt Russia.
Obviously, Belarus is important for Russia
geopolitically; but it will have to pay its own pay more than it does now. If
Minsk leaders aren’t willing to do that, they are unlikely to find the kind of
support they likely expect in the Russian capital, the Moscow foreign policy
commentator concludes.
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