By Moon Of Alabama
August 27, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - On August 15 we
explained why the color revolution in Belarus
would fail. Belarus' President Alexander
Lukashenko had offered President Vladimir Putin of
Russia to finally implement the long delayed Union
State that will unite Belarus with Russia. In
exchange he wanted full Russian backing for shutting
down the U.S. led color revolution against him.
Putin accepted the deal. In consequence:
Lukashenko, and his police, will not hang from a
pole. Russia will take care of the problem and
the Union State will finally be established.
That does not mean that the color revolution
attempt is over. The U.S. and its lackey Poland
will not just pack up and leave. But with the
full backing from Russia assured, Lukashenko can
take the necessary steps to end the riots.
And that is what he did. Lukashenko continued to
allow demonstrations but when on Sunday the
demonstrators were directed to storm the
presidential palace they saw a theatrical but
strong response:
[T]he Polish-run Nexta Telagram channel (which
is the main medium used by the Empire to
overthrow Lukashenko) initially called for a
peaceful protest, but at the end of the day a
call was made to try to take over the main
Presidential building. When the rioters (at this
point we are dealing with an illegal, violent,
attempt to overthrow the state – so I don’t call
these people demonstrators) got to the building
they were faced with a real “wall” of riot cops
in full gear: this (really scary) sight was
enough to stop the rioters who stood for a
while, and then had to leave.
Second, Lukashenko did something rather
weird, but which makes perfectly good sense in
the Belarusian context: he dressed himself in
full combat gear, grabbed an AKSU-74 assault
rife, dressed his (15 year old!) son also in
full combat gear (helmet included) and flew in
his helicopter over Minsk and then landed in the
Presidential building. They then walked to the
riot cops, where Lukashenko warmly thanked them
and which resulted in the full police force
giving him a standing ovation. To most of us
this behavior might look rather outlandish if
not outright silly. But in the context of the
Belarusian crisis, which is a crisis primarily
fought in the informational realm, it makes
perfectly good sense.
The protesters, which police had earlier
identified as "rich city kids, the children of
rich parents who are fed up with the well-fed life",
did not have the stomach to attack a well armed and
motivated police force.
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The NATO lobby shop Atlantic Council has also recognized that fact and bemoans it:
The protesters are generally very sweet, polite,
and peaceful. Many are young, middle class
Belarusians who work in the country’s booming IT
industry and come to rallies dressed in
form-fitting hipster ensembles. Unlike events in
Kyiv in 2013-14, there is no militant edge to
the demonstrations. Indeed, this revolution is
so velvet that at times it feels positively
sleepy. For better or worse, there is a marked
absence of the rough and stalwart young men
capable of making liberals uncomfortable or
leading the resistance if and when the
authoritarian state decides to deploy force.
Without Nazi stormtroopers like the U.S. used
during the 2014 Maidan riots in Ukraine there is no
chance to overthrow Lukashenko. With such troops the
fight would end in a massacre and Lukashenko would
still be the winner. The author rightly concludes:
[T]he resistance of the Lukashenka regime is
strengthening by the day. With Russia now
seemingly standing firmly behind Lukashenka,
photogenic rallies and patchy strike action will
not be enough to bring about historic change.
It is over. The 'patchy strikes' were never real
industrial actions. A few journalist of the Belarus
state TV went on a strike. They were unceremoniously
fired and replaced with Russian journalists. A few
hundred workers at the MTZ Minsk Tractor Works did a
walk out. But MTZ has 17,000 employees and the
16,500+ who did not walk out know very well why they
still have their jobs. Should Lukashenko fall it is
highly likely that their state owned company will be
sold off for pennies and immediately 'right sized'
meaning that most of them would be out of work.
During the last 30 years they have seen that happen
in every country around Belarus. There have no urge
to experience that themselves.
On Monday the leader of the earlier MTZ walk out,
one Sergei Dylevsky,
was arrested while he agitated for more strikes.
Dylevsky is a member of the self-proclaimed
Coordination Council of the opposition which demands
negotiations over the presidency. Other members of
the council have been called in for questioning by
state investigators over a criminal case against the
council.
Meanwhile the rather hapless opposition candidate
Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who falsely claimed to
have won the election, is in Lithuania. She is
supposed to be an English teacher but has
difficulties reading the English text
begging (vid) for 'western' support. She has
already met various 'western' politicians including
the General Secretary of the German Christian
Democratic Union party of chancellor Angela Merkel,
Peter Zeimiag, and the U.S. Deputy Secretary of
State Stephen Biegun. Neither will be able to help
her.
With Russia's backing the military, political and
economic stability of Belarus is for now guaranteed.
Lukashenko will at some point be ousted but that
will be at a time and in a way that is convenient
for Russia and not because some hapless NED financed
IT hipsters try to stage a revolution.
Source -
Moon Of Alabama