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How the Wagner Group Mutiny Became a Belarusian PR Triumph

Belarusian President Lukashenko helped Russia end the weekend's revolution led by Wagner's leader Prigozhin. He's gone from being seen as Moscow's vassal to a regional statesman. Can it last?
Belarusian President Lukashenko helped Russia end the weekend's revolution led by Wagner's leader Prigozhin. He's gone from being seen as Moscow's vassal to a regional statesman. Can it last?
how the wagner group mutiny became a belarusian pr triumph
Alexander Lukashenko. Photo: Prachatai/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
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He wanted to go all the way to Moscow but has likely ended up in Minsk instead.

Fighters from the infamous Russian private military company the Wagner Group were already on their way to the capital when news came from the government in Belarus.

'[Wagner Group boss] Yevgeny Prigozhin accepted the proposal of the president of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, to stop the movement of armed personnel of the Wagner company inside Russia, and take additional steps to de-escalate tensions,' the official statement said.

Prigozhin's whereabouts are currently unknown but he reportedly left Russia for Belarus, with his departure marking the end of his rebellion.

It would appear that Belarusian leader Lukashenko saved Russian President Vladimir Putin from domestic destabilisation in the middle of Russia's war on Ukraine.

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The Kremlin was grateful to Lukashenko for his efforts, its spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. A commentator on Russian television was more effusive, saying that Lukashenko 'deserves a monument in the nicest part of Moscow.'

But how exactly did this surprising turn of events come about — and what role will Belarus play in the near future?

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A threat to power in Minsk

Over the course of the revolt, it became clear that Lukashenko would stand by Putin's side. The two heads of state had spoken on the phone at least twice. Lukashenko is said to have offered to work as a mediator because he's known Prigozhin personally for 20 years, sources in the Kremlin said. At the same time, the Belarusian Security Council said that Belarus would remain Russia's ally and that any conflict within Russia would be a gift to the West.

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'Lukashenko has an interest in preventing a major crisis in Russia,' said Yauheni Preiherman, director of the think tank, the Minsk Dialogue Council on International Relations.

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The big concern for the government in Minsk is that fighting in Ukraine could spread to Belarusian territory, he told DW.

This fear appears to be warranted, as evidenced by the appeal launched by Lukashenko opponents from the Kalinouski Regiment, which consists of Belarusian volunteers fighting on the side of the Ukrainian army against Russia.

While Prigozhin was still conducting his mutiny, the regiment declared in a video that they were ready to seize the opportunity and 'liberate Belarus from dictatorship and occupation.'

'Lukashenko's interest is to prevent such a thing from happening,' Preiherman said.

From supplicant to saviour?

Since 1999, Belarus and Russia have been linked in the so-called 'Union State of Russia and Belarus' that's based on a treaty from 1997. But Lukashenko has tried to maintain a degree of autonomy from Putin in the past.

'Their relationship has always been quite turbulent and has seen many ups and downs,' Preiherman noted.

But Lukashenko has been more reliant on Putin since the summer of 2020, perhaps even earlier. Back then, after rigged presidential elections, Lukashenko faced massive popular protests. Thousands demanded his resignation. But the Kremlin stood by Lukashenko with loans and the announcement of a possible intervention. Lukashenko brutally crushed the democratic protests, whose leaders were arrested or forced into exile.

But now Putin and Lukashenko have switched roles, so to speak, observes Belarusian human rights activist Olga Karach, head of the Belarusian civil society initiative, Our House.

'Before, Lukashenko was in the role of the supplicant who couldn't restore order in his own country on his own ... Now it's Putin who could only restore order with outside help,' she told DW.

Karach believes that the Belarusian leader will also benefit from this in terms of domestic politics. In recent months, there has been much speculation about 68-year-old Lukashenko's alleged poor health. Now, however, it looks like 'his authority would increase, especially in the Belarusian security apparatus,' she said. This would probably also weaken the Belarusian opposition, Karach added.

More influence in Moscow

During Russia's war on Ukraine, Lukashenko has been a loyal ally to Putin, allowing Russia to fire rockets on the country from Belarusian territory. After the announcement was made that Russia would be allowed to station nuclear weapons in Belarus, many experts concluded this was yet another sign that Belarus was becoming a Russian 'vassal' state.

But recent events could strengthen Lukashenko's position and influence on Russia, the Minsk Dialogue's Preiherman said. 'He will have more of a role in Russian domestic and foreign policy. I don't think many people in Moscow and in the Kremlin will like that,' he added.

This article went live on June twenty-seventh, two thousand twenty three, at four minutes past four in the afternoon.

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