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Increasing tensions between Belarus and Poland
By Marius Heuser
17 September 2005
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On August 25, the press department of Polish Prime Minister
Marek Belka announced that Belka had recently led a discussion
with the prime ministers of Latvia, Lithuania and Ukraine about
the possibilities of overthrowing Belarus President Alexander
Lukashenko. The previous week, Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski
had held similar talks with the presidents of Ukraine, Georgia
and Lithuania on the Ukrainian peninsula of Krim.
These unconcealed Polish threats against Belarus have been
preceded by a series of diplomatic conflicts between the two countries.
In May, Lukashenko sacked the recently elected head of the Union
of Poles in Belarus (ZPB), Andzelika Borys, replacing him
with former chairman Tadeusz Krukowski. With 25,000 members, the
ZPB is the largest non-governmental organisation in Belarus. In
contrast to Borys, Krukowski believes in keeping out of the countrys
political debates.
At the end of July, the conflict escalated and both countries
recalled their ambassadors. Lukashenko had 20 leading members
of the ZPD arrested. On August 28, the ZPD elected a government
supporter, Jozef Lucznik, as its new chairman. The election, however,
was conducted behind closed doors. Belarus police had cordoned
off large areas surrounding the voting place and prevented some
delegates from voting. After the results were announced, the Polish
government refused to acknowledge Lucznik as the new chairman.
Even before this episode, and in particular after the so-called
Orange Revolution in Ukraine last year, politicians
and the media in Poland have campaigned heavily against the president
of Belarus. Hardly a day has gone by without a report in the media
about the last dictator in Europe. In recent weeks,
Kwasniewski, Belka and foreign minister Adam Rotfeld have been
at pains to gain the support of the European Union (EU). Rotfeld
told the Polish public broadcast network: Its good
that the EU takes an interest in many of the worlds countries,
like Burma, East Timor, various African regions, Burkino Faso
and the Sudan. However, it would also be a start if they considered
Belarus too.
The Polish government has long been an active supporter of
the Belarus opposition. On August 15, Belka allocated 950,000
zloty (234,000 euros) in an attempt to finance a Polish radio
broadcaster in Belarus. State technical employees are presently
working on resolving outstanding technical issues to allow broadcasts
to commence. Some oppositions groups, such as various anti-Russian
outfits and the extreme nationalist White Russian Peoples
Front, partly coordinate their work from within Poland.
A large proportion of the oppositions newspapers and leaflets
are being printed in Polish print shops.
If Belka is now talking about a possible overthrow of Lukashenko,
his words are to be taken seriously. Concrete plans have already
been drawn up for a putsch in Belarus in the same style as the
rose revolution in Georgia and the orange revolution
in Ukraine. All of these coloured revolutions have
been organised according to a similar model: a lost election is
disputed with various claims of irregularities which are then
carefully promoted in the media and channelled into demonstrations,
combined with international pressure, thus compelling the incumbent
ruler to stand down.
A significant role has been played in these events by various
youth organisations that led the protests in these countries.
In Georgia it was Kmara, in Ukraine Pora
and in Belarus the opposition movement is being led by the Zubr
(bison) group. The members of all of these groups were educated
by the Serbian organisation Otpor, which organised the overthrow
of Serbian President Milosevic in 2000 with direct support from
the US. These opposition organisations are financed through a
network of various foundations, such as the National Democratic
Institute, which is chaired by the former US secretary of state,
Madeleine Albright, and the International Renaissance Foundation
(IRF), which obtains funding directly from the US State Department
and other Western nations.
A possible coloured revolution in Belarus is being planned
for the middle of next year, when the next presidential election
is to be held, and supposedly will take on the symbol of the blue
cornflower. Whether it pans out the way its organisers foresee,
however, remains to be seen. Lukashenko is relatively secure in
office and the opposition is divided into various antagonist groups.
What is certain, though, is that the Polish government will play
a significant role in an attempted regime change.
Polish politicians already played a decisive role during the
orange revolution in Ukraine. Without the massive support from
the Polish government for Victor Yushchenko, the power struggle
in Ukraine would hardly have been as quick and smooth.
Belka had already issued warnings several weeks before the
Ukrainian presidential elections about possible election rigging
and had threatened the government. A few days after the election,
Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski travelled to Kiev as the
governments official observer. Before departing, he spoke
to both US President George Bush and German Chancellor Gerhard
Schröder and developed a three-point plan, the
content of which largely coincided with demands of the Ukrainian
opposition.
Kwasniewski used all his powers to prevent serious resistance
against the toppling of incumbent President Viktor Yanukovich.
On November 26, when 60,000 miners from the countrys east
made their way to Kiev to confront supporters of the orange revolution,
Kwasniewski mustered all his diplomatic weight to prevent their
arrival. After the demonstration was stopped, two of the three
demands of the marchers were met on that same evening.
Two roundtable discussions were held, where the opposition
laid out its demands. Kwasniewski played a decisive role here
as well. After the second roundtable, Yushchenko and Kwasniewski
spoke together to demonstrators in front of the Mariinski Palace.
Yushchenko declared: Without the Polish president, no solution
would have been possible, or it would have been only a modest
one.
Yushchenko was not the only one pleased with Kwasniewskis
intervention. During a telephone conference with Kwasniewski,
US President Bush said: Aleksander, you did so well with
the Ukraine, do you have a bit of time for the Sudan? The
United States had long been campaigning for regime change in Ukraine.
Geo-strategical interests
The weakening of Russias influence in Ukraine constituted
an important step in reducing Russias geo-strategic role
in Eurasia. Without Ukraine, wrote the American intelligence
group Stratfor, which has close ties to the US intelligence services,
Russia is doomed to a painful slide into geopolitical obsolescence
and ultimately, perhaps even non-existence. The United States
views Russia as a direct competitor over the strategically important
oil reserves in the Caspian Sea region, and therefore is determined
that Russian influence, dating back to the Soviet era, has to
be weakened.
The calculated intervention of the Polish government opened
the back door for the US in Ukraine. Poland aims to play a similar
role with its current threats against Belarus. Here too, what
is at stake are global geo-strategical interests and not the concerns
of the Polish minority in Belarus or the democratic rights of
that countrys population in general.
Belarus is the last ex-Soviet republic that retains close connections
to Moscow. Russia accounts for over 68 percent of its imports
and 50 percent of exports. Two of the most important gas pipelines
from Russia to Germany, whose capacity of 42 billion cubic metres
per year accounts for most of Germanys gas imports, run
through Belarus: the Jamal and the Northern Lights pipelines.
If Belarus were to distance itself from Moscow and seek closer
ties to the West, this would have catastrophic consequences for
Russias economy. Russias economic and political weight
in Europe as a whole would be dramatically reduced. At the same
time, trade possibilities for new Europe, that is,
those Eastern European countries that stand closest to the US,
would increase outside of Russia. Both are considered important
aims of American foreign policy.
It is therefore no surprise that the United States has supported
the pro-West opposition for years, both financially and logistically.
In the 2001 presidential election in Belarus, private and government
organisations and foundations from the US and other Western countries
handed out, according to the German daily Junge Welt, $40
million to the election campaign of opposition candidate Vladimir
Gontscharik.
According to official figures from Belarus, $24 million have
already flowed from US coffers into the pockets of the opposition
for the 2006 election. Although difficult to confirm, the Russian
newspaper Rian Novosti reported that most of the opposition
groups and media are financed from the US.
One can find numerous web sites of organisations that have
connections to the Otpor group and its partners, including those
who support the opposition in Belarus. Many of these groups, such
as the Students for Global Democracy (SfGD), have
close connections to government and semi-government organisations
in the US. The SfGD is currently collecting donations for its
Bell Campaign to fund the Belarus opposition.
The Belarus offshoot of Otpor, Zubr, whose motto is Honour,
Motherland, Freedom, also has close ties to the US. In April
of this year, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met personally
with representatives of the group in the Lithuanian city of Vilnius.
Rice explained that the meeting served to help the organisation
achieve more freedom. She said the president of Belarus should
understand that his behaviour was being monitored very closely.
Representatives of the opposition then declared that, according
to their assessment, irregularities would occur in next years
election and that they are already planning demonstrations.
US President Bush has made it clear on many occasions that
he would welcome a change in government in Belarus.
The role of Poland
As with the Iraq war and the power struggle in Ukraine, the
Polish ruling elite is taking on the role of a US pawn in Europe,
helping Washington pursue its aims.
Behind this policy are vital interests of the Polish state
itself. Poland can only play a leading role in Eastern Europe
and on the continent as a whole by achieving independence from
Germany and old Europe on one side, and Russia on
the other. Economically, Poland is closely tied to the EU: it
accounts for 75 percent of Polish exports and 60 percent of its
imports. At the same time, Poland is dependent on Russian gas
and oil for its energy supplies.
The prospect of an alliance between Russia and Germany, for
which German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder has been campaigning
for years, is viewed critically within Poland. The Polish weekly
magazine Wprost referred to the recent agreement between
Russia and Germany to build a gas pipeline through the Baltic
Sea, in a none-too-subtle reference to the Stalin-Hitler Pact
of 1939, as the Schröder-Putin Pact. The ruling
elite in Poland fears that it will once more be ground between
these two great powers.
The Baltic Sea pipeline is to channel Russian gas directly
to Germany. By 2010 it will export up to 55 billion cubic metres
of gas to the EU every year. The construction of this pipeline
will largely cut off Poland from Russian gas, which is currently
pumped into and through the country using the Jamal pipeline.
Sejm Jan Rokita, a leading member of the opposition, said: The
pipeline through the Baltic Sea will cause injury to the common
interests of the EU and individual states.
Another problem confronting Polands energy supplies is
the oil pipeline from the Ukrainian Black Sea port in Odessa to
the Polish-Ukrainian border city of Brody. The pipeline was built
to transport oil from Kazakhstan through the Black Sea directly
to Europe and therefore to bypass Russian territory. Initially,
the pipeline was planned to reach the northern Polish harbour
city of Danzig, and would have allowed Poland to overcome its
dependence on Russian oil. After the completion of the Odessa-Brody
section of the pipeline, Russia increased pressure and finally
managed to use the pipeline to pump its own oil for export in
the opposite direction. With the change of government in Ukraine,
Poland has achieved an important victory in this dispute.
These developments make clear that both the perspective espoused
by German Chancellor Schröder and othersthat an alliance
between Russia and a united Europe can stand up to the United
Statesand the project of uniting Europe itself on a capitalist
basis are doomed to fail as a result of the continents own
internal contradictions.
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