Belarus and Ukraine: Historic Parallels, Russia’s
Imperial Designs
Belarus is on a path of national rebirth that is increasingly incompatible
with Putin’s pan-Slavic expansionism.
By Andreas Umland, September 20, 2020
Most Europeans are unaware that Ukraine and Belarus are two of the
culturally and geographically closest nations in Europe.
The two countries’ Eastern Slavic languages, major Christian-Orthodox
сhurches and peculiar locations between Russia on the one side and the EU as
well as NATO on the other are also comparable.
Post-colonial people
On one level, both nations are also very close to the — also largely
Orthodox and Eastern Slavic — Russians.
And yet, the Ukrainians and Belarusians are, as post-colonial people,
fundamentally different from post- and neo-imperial Russians.
That means that Russia’s international ambitions remain hegemonic — and are
thus somewhat similar to those of today’s Turks and Chinese.
Despite these remarkable structural parallels between Belarus and Ukraine,
most commentators — not just Western ones, but also Russian, Belarusian and
Ukrainian ones — today emphasize the differences rather than similarities
between the two brother nations.
“Belarus is NOT Ukraine!” is
the core message of many politicians’ and experts’ recent comments on the
ongoing electoral uprising in Minsk.
Belarusians’ pre-Soviet, Soviet and post-Soviet history
It is indeed important to factor in that the Belarusians have a pre-Soviet,
Soviet and post-Soviet history that is distinct from that of the Ukrainians.
Belarusian nationalism during the Tsarist period was already then weaker
than Ukrainian desire for national liberation — an important difference still
relevant today.
The Belarusian diaspora during the Cold War years was less organized and
active than the far more visible Ukrainian emigré communities in Western Europe
and the United States.
Last but not least, the new Belarusian state has — unlike the Ukrainian one
— participated in several of Russia’s various neo-imperial organizational
schemes after 1991.
Belarus was one of the co-founders of the two principal organizations
holding together Moscow’s hegemonic realm on the territory of the former
Tsarist and Soviet empires today.
A “Warsaw Pact 2.0”
1. Minsk stood at the roots of the so-called Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO), a Russia-dominated sort of “Warsaw Pact 2.0.” It wasn’t by
accident that this organization was founded on the date of Putin’s 50th
birthday, in then Communist Party-ruled Moldova, on October 7th, 2002.
2. Belarus has also been a founding member of the Eurasian Economic Union
(EEU) whose initial trilateral treaty was signed by Moscow, Minsk and Astana on
May 29th 2014.
That was the time of the Kremlin escalating its hybrid war against Ukraine.
A Moscow-directed pseudo-copy of the EU, the EEU has taken over what are
traditionally considered classic national competencies, in such fields as trade
and production regulation, from its member states.
Today, the Eurasian Economic Union is the major vehicle for the Kremlin’s
promotion of Russia as an allegedly independent global “pole” in a supposedly
“multipolar” world.
Belarus is important for this Russian geopolitical mirage because it is the
only country that, in terms of geography, provides the Eurasian Economic Union
with an exclusively European element (fellow EEU member Armenia is culturally
European, yet — formal geographical term — Asian).
Russia’s pawn?
On March 27th, 2014, Belarus was — along with Russia and Armenia — the only
European country that voted in the UN General Assembly against the resolution
condemning the Russian annexation of Crimea.
The other supporters of Moscow’s move were Bolivia, Cuba, Nicaragua, North
Korea, Sudan, Syria, Venezuela and Zimbabwe.
It is also worth recalling that, exactly 8 years after the dissolution of
the USSR on 8th December 1999, Belarus signed a Treaty on the Foundation of a
Union State with Russia.
While it was fully ratified by both countries, this has paradoxically not
yet led to the emergence of a new political union. In spite of certain
institutional trappings and a small joint budget, the Russian-Belarusian Union
State exists largely on paper so far.
Ukraine’s determined European stance
In contrast, Ukraine has been more or less pro-European under almost all of
its leaders since 1991 — and not merely under its prominently pro-Western
Presidents Viktor Yushchenko (2005-2010) and Petro Poroshenko (2014-2019).
Lest we forget, Kyiv declared full membership of Ukraine in the EU as an
official aim already with a presidential decree in 1998.
The Verkhovna Rada (Supreme Council), Ukraine’s unicameral parliament,
wrote the aim of accession to the EU and NATO into Ukraine’s National Security
Law in 2003, and into the Ukrainian Constitution in 2019.
The conclusion of an especially sizable Association Agreement with the EU
in 2014 is understood by many Ukrainians as being a step towards their
country’s eventually full membership in the EU.
Despite these differences between Ukraine and Belarus, the people of
Belarus increasingly see themselves as belonging to Europe.
Who likes Eurasia?
While Russians, too, tend to define themselves first and foremost as
Europeans, the name that Moscow chose in 2015 for the transnational grouping
that it claims to be the center of is “Eurasia” — rather than merely Eastern
Europe.
One wonders how much the now nationally awakened Belarusians will be
willing to follow the Kremlin in this peculiar civilizational project. It seems
to hold less and less charm for many Belarusian people.
Differently put, more and more nationally aware Belarusian may have
problems to accept — as Moscow proposes to Minsk — belonging to a larger
cultural collective which is cryptically labeled “Eurasian” – rather than to
the familiar European civilization.
The liberation-oriented pathos of the 2020 protests is posing a double
conceptual problem for any future realization of the Belarusian-Russian union
that Moscow may envisage.
Very unequal
On the structural level, it is clear that a Russian-Belarusian union will
not be a merger of equals.
Belarus’s entire official population of approximately 9.5 million is about
as large as the number of officially registered inhabitants of the city of
Moscow (which altogether has about 12.5 million residents).
It is about half the size of the population of the Moscow Metropolitan Area
estimated to amount to around 20 million.
The protesters today insist vis-à-vis the Lukashenko regime on the popular
sovereignty of the Belarusian political nation. They express this among others
with a national flag which is not the Belarusian state’s official banner.
Today’s protesters in Belarus are thus, in some ways, more radical than the
Ukrainian 2004 and 2013-2014 revolutionaries who used the official Ukrainian
national flag (apart from numerous party banners) as the main non-partisan
visual marker symbolizing their fight for popular sovereignty.
A pivotal question obviously for Putin in Moscow and Lukashenko in Minsk is
this: Will Belarusians, after their exhausting protests under Belarus’s
national flag, agree to belong to a union state with a different banner and
with its power center in Moscow rather than Minsk?
Partnering with Russia – yes. But with Putin?
The second conceptual problem lies in the similarities of Lukashenko’s and
Putin’s political regimes and economies.
Many Belarusian may be happy, in principle, to enter a union with Russia.
But a Russia that is ruled by another long-term president who is even older
than their own and now widely vilified Lukashenko?
Plus, partnering with a Russia that has a political system rather similar
to Lukashenko’s? Such a prospect may even be unattractive for Belarusian
russophiles.
Russia’s weak economy doesn’t help
The desire among the Belarusian people to buy into partnering with Russia
will be all the weaker if the Russian economy remains hampered by deep
structural problems and is “progressing” only in accumulating foreign
sanctions.
True, the Belarusian economy’s orientation on Russia’s markets and energy
have been the prime movers of integration between the two countries.
Yet, what happens if the world price for fossil energy resources remains
low? Putin will take care of his own people and may gradually run out of
maneuvering space to support Belarus.
In addition, what happens if the Russian markets for Belarusian export
goods — whether machinery or consumer and agricultural products — continue to
shrink?
Post-revolutionary Belarusian nationalism
Putin’s Russia is in a tight spot. The emergence of
post-revolutionary Belarusian civic nationalism makes the
country increasingly unsuitable for submission to a Russian-Belarusian union
state.
One has to wonder: what will the Kremlin’s response will be to deal with
such a problem?
The touchy Crimea issue in Russian/Belarusian relations
The presumed real winner of the August
2020 Belarusian presidential elections, Sviatlana Tsykhanouskaia, in an interview confirmed that Crimea
belongs legally to Ukraine.
She has thus manifestly violated Putin’s new 2020 Constitution that
explicitly forbids any questioning of the integrity of Russia’s territory — to
which, according to the Russian Constitution, Crimea belongs.
It seems increasingly unlikely that this and other ideological differences
between the modern outlook of the Belarusian opposition and the neo-imperial
worldview of Russia’s current leadership can be reconciled.
What will Moscow decide to do, if and when it eventually concludes that
these contradictions cannot be diplomatically resolved?
The worst case scenario
In the worst case, Belarus’s fate may become more similar to Ukraine’s than
the two nations’ very different modern histories and international embeddedness
suggest.
As long as revanchism remains a major determinant of Russian foreign
political behavior, the principal distinctions between Ukrainian and Belarusian
national self-identification and foreign orientation may be too small to make a
notable difference for Moscow.
Post-revolutionary Belarus may have, from the Kremlin’s viewpoint, to
submit to a Russia-dominated union state and to accept its belonging to Eurasia
— rather than Europe.
If not, the greater moderation of Belarusian protesters that is visible
even in these days of protests in Belarus when compared to Ukrainian
revolutionaries, by the end of the Euromaidan, may be of little consequence for
Moscow.
Irreconcilable differences?
However, the continuing friendliness of today’s Belarusians towards Russia,
during and after the protests, may be insufficient to compensate for their
dangerously growing lack of submissiveness.
Unless Russia itself and
especially its international outlook changes soon and deeply, Russia
and Belarus may be heading for a showdown.
More on this topic
·
Putin’s Russia Is Like
Brezhnev’s USSR: Will the End Be the Same?
·
Ukraine and the Return of Geopolitics
·
How to Handle the Evolution of
Belarus
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