Vast drills spotlight Russia's grip on Belarus during standoff with West
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[February 09, 2022]
By Tom Balmforth
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia launches the
active phase of vast military exercises in Belarus on Thursday, a
display of strength that shows how Moscow's tightening grip on Minsk has
given it enhanced capabilities in its standoff with the West over
Ukraine.
The joint Allied Resolve drills that NATO has described as Russia's
biggest deployment to ex-Soviet Belarus since the Cold War run until
Feb. 20 and are part of a Russian troop buildup near Ukraine that has
stirred fears of a looming invasion.
Russia, which denies any invasion plans, has not disclosed how many
troops will be involved. Many of the troops have been deployed from
thousands of miles away in Russia's Eastern Military District in the far
east.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said last week that Russia was
expected to have 30,000 troops as well as Spetsnaz special operations
forces, SU-35 fighter jets, S-400 air defence systems and
nuclear-capable Iskander missiles.
In military terms, the deployments create a new front for Ukraine to
worry about and stretch Kyiv's forces thinner around its long defensive
perimeter, said Neil Melvin, director of International Security Studies
at the RUSI think-tank in London.
The deployments to the north of Ukraine put Russian troops much closer
to Ukraine's capital Kyiv, which lies just over 90 km (56 miles) from
the border at its closest point.
With the deployment of fighters and air defence systems, Russia has much
more effective defensive cover for its Kaliningrad exclave in Europe,
and electronic jamming systems in Belarus make Western intelligence
gathering harder, said Melvin.
"(This) puts forces in play on NATO's eastern flank that will discourage
or prevent NATO having any kind of role," he said.
NO MORE AMBIGUITY
For years, Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko, a wily political
operator in power since 1994, played off East against West for political
gain and resisted the idea of hosting a permanent Russian military base.
But since Russian President Vladimir Putin shored him up with political
and economic support to help him weather huge opposition protests in
2020 he has shed much of that veneer of autonomy, analysts said.
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Military vehicles are seen during the joint exercises of the armed
forces of Russia and Belarus at a firing range in the Brest Region,
Belarus February 3, 2022. Vadim Yakubyonok/BelTA/Handout via
REUTERS/File Photo
"I think he finally decided that in
order to stay in power he should rely on his strategic alliance with
Moscow and of course these joint military exercises are yet another
kind of manifestation of this new closeness," said Andrey Kortunov,
head of the Russian International Affairs Council which is close to
the Foreign Ministry in Moscow.
"Now he has full backing from Putin in exchange for his loyalty.
Apparently both sides are happy with this deal, at least for the
time being," he said.
In recent months, Lukashenko has publicly offered to host Russian
nuclear missiles in Belarus. Moscow and Minsk have agreed a joint
military doctrine for their "union state" integration project.
Russian warplanes now regularly patrol the Belarusian border.
Last year the two countries opened a joint training centre in Grodno
in western Belarus.
"This is basic code for a permanent presence," said Mathieu Boulegue,
a research fellow at London's Chatham House think-tank. "You can
call it what you want: whatever the rhetoric around it, it's going
to turn into an informal permanent presence that Russia has always
wanted."
On Feb. 27, Belarus is expected to hold a referendum to change its
constitution. Changes would include removing its formal status as a
"neutral" country and a "nuclear-free" zone.
'PANDORA'S BOX'
The Kremlin has said the Russian troops will return to their
permanent garrisons once the drills are over.
But the beleaguered Belarusian opposition-in-exile, which has
fretted for years that Lukashenko is trading off chunks of
sovereignty in return for backing from Moscow, fears Russia's troops
may not leave entirely.
"Lukashenko has opened Pandora's Box. He thinks he's still in
control, but we're not sure. Is he able to make sure these troops
are going home, or not?" said Franak Viacorka, an adviser to
Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya.
(Reporting by Tom Balmforth; Additional reporting by Mark Trevelyan;
Editing by Peter Graff)
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