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Belarus leader blasts Moscow as relations plummet
Yahoo News ^ | Sunday, Jan 14, 2007 | Valery Kalinovsky

Posted on 01/15/2007 6:48:26 AM PST by A. Pole

Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko has accused Moscow of trying to incorporate his country into Russia, in some of his sharpest comments yet against one-time ally and energy partner Moscow.

Speaking after a bitter oil transit row between the two neighbours, the Belarussian leader referred to a long-standing plan to form a joint state and said Moscow was betraying the spirit of the plan.

He also blasted Sunday a pet Kremlin project, a plan by Gazprom to build a gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea to Germany, which he said was the "most stupid" plan in Russian history.

"The Russian leadership is demanding that we join the Russian Federation -- that's what is in the heads of the Russian leadership. I don't want to bury the sovereignty and independence of the country," Lukashenko said.

"From all the consultations and discussions, I have understood that we have different approaches and understandings of the building of a union state. A union should be created on principles of equal rights," Lukashenko said as he cast his vote in district elections.

He again accused Moscow of being the guilty party in the oil transit dispute that prompted a shut-down of the main oil pipeline from Russia to the EU last Monday, before a resolution was found on Wednesday.

"If Russia is going to reach for the valve every year, is going to switch off the gas and oil supplies to its ally, we can't talk about a union state," he said, adding that counter-measures could be taken.

"If pressure by Russia continues, Belarus will introduce payment for the land used by the oil pipeline.... Such a step wouldn't contradict international law," he said.

The comments underlined the increasingly fraught relationship between ex-Soviet Belarus and its giant neighbour, despite Lukashenko's previous record of loyalty to Moscow.

The Belarussian leader, who has ruled with an iron fist since 1994, has recently indicated that he is rethinking foreign policy and has made overtures to southern neighbour Ukraine, which has more decisively broken from Moscow's influence.

Lukashenko was also scathing about the Nord Stream pipeline project, which would bypass the ex-communist countries of eastern Europe and take natural gas to Germany and other western European nations.

"The Baltic gas pipeline -- it's the most stupid plan in the history of Russia. It should be in the Guinness book of records," Lukashenko said.

"It's not known what will happen to it as it passes through piles of ammunition on the bottom of the Baltic Sea," he said, referring to environmental concerns related to World War II debris on the Baltic sea bed.

The pipeline project has prompted anger in Belarus' western neighbour Poland, which has been one of Lukashenko's sharpest critics along with the United States.

Washington has dubbed Belarus Europe's "last dictatorship".

Some analysts have predicted an about-turn by Lukashenko in which he may court the "anti-Russian" countries of central and eastern Europe, some of them new EU members, in order to shore up his isolated position.

Lukashenko may offer his Western critics "something like a Gorbachevian perestroika," Viktor Kremenyuk of the Institute for USA and Canada Studies in Moscow, told AFP on Saturday, referring to the liberalisation that took place under Russia's last Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

"He doesn't need to change much as something has happened ... western Europe has become too dependent on Russia. This has put the nations of eastern Europe on alert" so that they are seeking new allies, he said.

Belarussian opposition groups said that local elections on Sunday had been marred by widespread violations including the arrest of over 30 activists and mass early voting, seen as a way of facilitating violations.

"I don't expect these to be honest elections -- we haven't had honest elections in Belarus for a long time," said opposition leader Vintsuk Vyachorka of the Belarussian Popular Front, who was standing for election in Minsk.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: europe; gas; oil; trade

1 posted on 01/15/2007 6:48:29 AM PST by A. Pole
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To: lizol; Vorthax; Polak z Polski; Grzegorz 246; Lukasz; JoAnka; warsaw44; anonymoussierra; Juliusz; ..
Some analysts have predicted an about-turn by Lukashenko in which he may court the "anti-Russian" countries of central and eastern Europe, some of them new EU members, in order to shore up his isolated position.
2 posted on 01/15/2007 6:50:32 AM PST by A. Pole (Ukrainian proverb: "Iak buly moskali, buv khlib na stoli, a iak bude Ukraina, bude bida po kolina")
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To: A. Pole
Popcorn time


3 posted on 01/15/2007 6:55:13 AM PST by sono (For everyone but America the free world is mostly a free ride. - Mark Steyn)
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To: sono

4 posted on 01/15/2007 7:28:33 AM PST by Paleo Conservative
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To: Paleo Conservative

Impressive!


5 posted on 01/15/2007 8:30:27 AM PST by sono (There are only two exit strategies - One is victory, the other defeat - Joe Lieberman)
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To: sono

I figured we'd need lots of popcorn. A couple of those could serve a 16 screen theater complex.


6 posted on 01/15/2007 9:48:35 AM PST by Paleo Conservative
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To: A. Pole

This is a humorous turn of events for several reasons. Firstly, when Uncle Luk knew Yeltsin could buy the farm because of his bum ticker, he was all for Belarus-Russian Federation intergration - saw it as a way for him to become the leader of both nations. Now he's not sure sure. Hmm.

Another humorous (and sad) moment is how incredibly short-sighted Putin and Co's foreign policy has become. They've done more for turning the near abroad united against them than any NATO expansion could ever dream of.


7 posted on 01/16/2007 9:16:29 PM PST by Romanov (Golytsinites = "Lenin's Useful Idiots denying Reagan's Legacy")
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To: Romanov
They've done more for turning the near abroad united against them than any NATO expansion could ever dream of.

Very good point. Do they still whine about that (NATO expansion)?

8 posted on 01/16/2007 9:21:16 PM PST by VeniVidiVici (Celebrate Mediocrity!)
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To: VeniVidiVici

Of course - as long as they retain Soviet-era generals they'll always whine about it. And, their misplaced fear of NATO expansion has actually pushed them into making these ham-fisted foreign policy moves. Wounded pride is a dangerous thing.


9 posted on 01/16/2007 9:24:16 PM PST by Romanov (Golytsinites = "Lenin's Useful Idiots denying Reagan's Legacy")
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