WORLD DECEMBER 17, 2010
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On December 19, citizens in the former Soviet republic of Belarus will head to polls to vote in the country’s presidential election, the fourth since 1994. But Belarusians don’t have any real hope of unseating incumbent Alexander Lukashenko, who has ruled the country with an iron fist since winning the presidency 16 years ago. Widely known as “Europe’s Last Dictator,” Lukashenko has cracked down on independent media, routinely broken up public protests, and “disappeared” prominent opposition leaders. He has also rigged his election victories, and there are already signs that tampering will occur again this year. (It doesn’t help that his rivals couldn’t settle on a single candidate, instead flooding the field; there are nine contenders in the race.) It is no surprise, then, that the Belarusian leader has proudly predicted a landslide victory on Sunday. “There will definitely be political changes,” Lukashenko said last week, “but no change of power in Belarus.”
Earlier this decade, Lukashenko’s abuses led the United States and the European Union to impose a series of targeted sanctions on regime officials, which led the Belarusian government to reconsider a handful of its draconian actions. The sanctions were effective, in large part, because the U.S. and its European allies presented a united front. After all, unilateral sanctions don’t have the same bite as those implemented by several countries. (See the painstaking effort of the Obama administration to convince governments around the world to get on board with sanctions against Iran.) But, over the past year, that erstwhile front against Belarus has cracked. The EU has dropped many of its sanctions, and European leaders have even begun cozying up to Lukashenko. Meanwhile, the United States, while maintaining sanctions, has done little to press the Belarusian president on his abysmal human rights record.
Why has the West gone soft on Lukashenko? The answer, in fact, lies to the east: Belarus has increasingly become a pawn between Russia and Europe and the United States. And the winner of this geostrategic chess match has been the Belarusian dictator himself.
A landlocked country that borders Russia and three European Union states, Belarus regularly engages in unsavory behavior, whether oppressing its own people or selling weapons to rogue governments or elements in Syria, North Korea, Sudan, and Iran. In 2002, fed up with Lukashenko, the EU and U.S. placed visa bans on top Belarusian officials following the closure of an Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) office in Minsk. The results were positive: Lukashenko soon allowed the office to reopen. In 2006, after Lukashenko rigged the presidential election, Western governments imposed a new round of sanctions and demanded that the regime release six high-profile political prisoners. The following year, the U.S. froze the assets of the state oil-refining company, in which Lukashenko is alleged to have a large personal stake. Within two months, according to a recent article co-authored by former Bush administration officials David Kramer and Damon Wilson, a representative from the regime paid a quiet visit to the U.S. embassy to inquire if the release of the prisoners would result in an easing of the sanctions. Within two days of that meeting, the Belarusian government freed the first of several detainees.
But the West’s tough approach to Belarus began to slip soon after. In 2008, the EU voted to drop most of its visa bans on Belarusian officials, even though, just weeks earlier, the regime had staged parliamentary elections denounced as unfair by the OSCE. (This move was particularly galling in light of the fact that the U.S. ambassador had been forced to leave the country earlier that year over the continuation of U.S. sanctions; to this day, there is no ambassador in Minsk). In November 2009, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi became the first Western leader to visit Belarus since Lukashenko came to power. (“Good luck to you and your people, whom I know love you,” Berlusconi told his Belarusian counterpart. “This is demonstrated by the results from the elections.”) Berlusconi signed an economic agreement with Lukashenko, who touted the visit as a legitimization of his rule. That same year, the EU allowed Belarus into its “Eastern Partnership Initiative,” a trade and aid pact considered an initial step toward membership.
The reason for this backslide is obvious if one looks to the West’s ever-contentious relationship with Russia. For years, Moscow was content with Lukashenko who, as president, proposed a partial union between the two countries. He was also, in many ways, the ideal partner for a Russian regime that was itself becoming increasingly authoritarian under Vladimir Putin. Lukashenko was far more amenable to the Kremlin than pesky, pro-Western upstarts like Georgia’s Mikhail Saakashvili or Ukraine’s Victor Yushchenko. But relations between the two countries took a turn for the worse in 2007, when Russia’s Gazprom demanded a higher tax on the gas it sent to Belarus. This June, Lukashenko threatened to cut off Russian gas shipments to Europe in protest of increased tariffs. He has also angered Moscow by refusing to recognize the “independence” of the breakaway Georgian republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and by granting asylum this year to the ousted president of Kyrgyzstan, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, who earned the undying enmity of the Kremlin after reneging on an agreement to evict a U.S. military base from his country. In July, Russian state television—widely watched in Belarus—aired a blistering documentary about Lukashenko called “The Belarusian Godfather,” accusing him of corruption and tying him to a string of politically charged murders.
With the recent deterioration of Moscow-Minsk relations, some European countries—particularly those geographically close to Russia—have decided Lukashenko might be a useful buffer against Moscow. Last month, Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite paid a personal visit to Lukashenko and later told a delegation of European officials that he is “a guarantor of economic and political stability in Belarus, its independence.” (Grybauskaite later denied the remarks). Also in November, German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle and Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski traveled to Minsk to meet with Lukashenko, promising him aid in exchange for free and fair elections.
Meanwhile, the Obama administration has kept Bush-era sanctions in place, but some observers fear the recent deal signed by the United States and Lukashenko to eliminate Belarus’s Soviet-era enriched uranium gave short shrift to democracy and human rights. Kramer, co-author of the recent article on the efficacy of the West’s approach to Belarus and now the president of Freedom House, said of the joint statement issued after the deal was inked, “You’d never know that in that statement that the U.S. has a sanctions regime and doesn’t have an ambassador.” He worries that the “U.S. is moving closer to the EU’s softer version” of dealing with Lukashenko.
Democrats in Belarus roundly reject the West’s new, cynical approach to Lukashenko. “We want to convince European politicians that we are able to deal with Lukashenko ourselves and that they don’t need to play any games with him,” Uladzimir Niakliayeu, the leading opposition candidate in Sunday’s election, told me during a recent visit to Prague. “Europe should proceed from the view that Lukashenko is the last dictatorship in Europe and nothing will change until he goes,” Andrei Sannikov, a former deputy minister of foreign affairs under Lukashenko who is now running against him, told Bloomberg News last month.
This weekend’s election is sure to be rife with problems: Earlier this week, campaign workers for two opposition candidates were assaulted; meanwhile, onerous campaign regulations and Lukashenko’s monopolization of the state media will both cast a cloud over the outcome. All of which will only provide the Belarusian opposition more fodder in its challenge to the EU and U.S. “The greatest danger is that the West will be fooled by Lukashenko that this is a real election and not a simulation of an election,” Niakliayeu told me. “If the West recognizes this election as free and fair, that would be the worst thing for Belarus. The recognition, even with reservations, a long list of reservations, would mean death to the Belarusian democracy movement.”
So the West has a choice: It can return to its tougher, more effective approach to Lukashenko, punishing his government for its violations of Belarusians’ political and human rights and pushing for reform. Or it can let itself be fooled—and allow Belarus to continue suffering under the thumb of Europe’s last tyrant.
James Kirchick is a contributing editor for The New Republic and writer at large with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty based in Prague.
1 comments
James Kirchick claims that the West is cozying up to Alexander Lukashenko because of his problems with Russia. Well, I find the timing of this article very interesting, because in point of fact, Russia and Belarus have just signed a new energy agreement which appears to iron out their immediate problems: (Reuters 17 Dec) “Belarussian strongman Alexander Lukashenko, savouring a triumph on the eve of certain re-election, said on Friday his oil deal with Russia would benefit the economy and buoy the mood of the people. The 56-year-old Lukashenko, who is poised to win his fourth term as president in Sunday's vote, persuaded Moscow last week to end a months-long media campaign against him and drop duties on oil exports to Minsk in 2011. The deal is expected to save Belarus $4 billion next year -- enough to cover a budget deficit which has widened because of lavish pre-election spending by Lukashenko, including raising the minimum wage.” Given that the nadir of Russia-Belarus relations was in late June this year when Gazprom threatened to cut off gas in response to unpaid bills, why did Kirchick wait until now to castigate the West for supposedly “cozying up” to Lukashenko? Everything he says now could have been said six months ago. I suspect that Kirchick--among others--was waiting to see if Moscow-Minsk tensions could be exploited to the advantage of the US and the disadvantage of Russia. And now that Belarus has disappointed him by coming to terms with Russia, he’s shocked, shocked to “find out” that we are coddling “Europe’s last dictator.” That last is a nice phrase, because it focuses us on Europe, so we don’t have to ponder the comparison between Lukashenko and, say, Mubarak, a dictator whom we subsidize to the tune of $1 billion a year. Talk about coddling! Of course, dear Hosni has his uses, and apparently poor Lukashenko has blown his chances of being similarly useful. But, of course, it’s all about his repression of the Belorussian people, don’t you know. In addition, Kirchick tells us, Lukashenko has been engaged in other nastiness like shipping weapons to scary countries such as Sudan. But wait, I just read something from Der Spiegel about weapons shipments to Sudan. What was that? Oh, yes, now I remember: The Ukrainian T-72 tanks that were on a ship bound for Kenya captured by Somali pirates. All of a sudden, a nice quiet arms deal fell under the harsh glare of publicity. Who were those tanks for? As Der Spiegel quotes from a DoS cable via Wikileaks: "Kameru [Kenya’s Chief of Military Intelligence] mentioned that, in the government of Kenya's view, the tanks belong to the GOSS [Govt of South Sudan].... He added that (Kenyan) President (Mwai) Kibaki was personally very angry about this issue. During the meeting, Kianga commented that the government of Kenya was 'very confused' by our position … since the past transfers had been undertaken in consultation with the United States.... Kianga asked about the significance of what appeared to him to be a major policy reversal. … Kianga asked that the United States explain directly to the Government of Southern Sudan / Sudan People's Liberation Army why (they) are blocking the tank transfer." Hmmm--“past transfers...in consultation with the US”. Wow! So, the US was working with Kenya to supply the rebels in South Sudan with clandestine shipments of Ukrainian armor and who knows what else, until those Somali pirates ruined the whole thing; then it was time to disavow the project and chastise Ukraine and Kenya for their naughty and, of course, entirely rogue behavior. I assume Kirchick is familiar with this reporting since he works for RFE/RL and his beat is Eastern Europe. And yet, as he condemns Lukashenko for arms trafficking, he makes no mention of Ukraine and Kenya doing the same thing with the approval (if not at the instigation) of the US. But of course, when WE do it, it’s different, because we can’t let the Chinese get their greedy paws on all that nice Sudanese oil, can we? Thank goodness Kirchick is a journalist and not a “political activist with an agenda” like Julian Assange!
- ccarrick@vzavenue.net-old
December 19, 2010 at 4:07pm