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PONARS Eurasia
PONARS Eurasia
  • About
    • Contact
    • List of Members
    • About Membership
  • Policy Memos
    • List of Policy Memos
    • Submissions
  • Podcast
  • Online Academy
  • Events
    • Past Events
  • Recommended
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RECOMMENDED
  • Are Elections Bad for Georgia’s Democracy?

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  • The Russian Orthodox Church | PONARS Eurasia Online Academy

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  • How Russian Economic Policy is Made | PONARS Eurasia Online Academy

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  • Authoritarian Rallying as Reputational Cascade? Evidence from Putin’s Popularity Surge after Crimea

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  • Russia’s Military Interventions: Patterns, Drivers, and Signposts

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RSS PONARS Eurasia Podcast
  • Russia's Legislative Elections followup [Lipman Series 2021] October 4, 2021
    In this week’s PONARS Eurasia Podcast, Maria Lipman chats with Tanya Lokot and Nikolay Petrov about the results of Russia’s legislative elections and about what comes next.
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    In this week's PONARS Eurasia Podcast episode, Maria Lipman chats with Denis Volkov, Naira Davlashyan, and Peter Slevin about why COVID-19 vaccination rates are still so low across the globe, comparing vaccine hesitant constituencies across Russia, France, and the United States.  
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    In today's episode of the PONARS Eurasia Podcast, Maria Lipman chats with Olga Malinova about the myth of the "wild nineties" and the political actors involved in its construction.
  • Music and Politics in Contemporary Russia [Lipman Series 2021] April 12, 2021
    In this week's PONARS Eurasia Podcast, Maria Lipman chats with Alexander Gorbachev about the dynamic music scene in contemporary Russia, and how free Russian musicians are to make political statements.
  • How is the Russian Government Coping with Rising Food Prices? [Lipman Series 2021] March 15, 2021
    In this week's PONARS Eurasia Podcast, Maria Lipman chats with Anton Tabakh about rising food prices in Russia, and what they might mean for Russia's current and future stability.
  • The Communist Party of the Russian Federation: More Than Just Systemic Opposition? [Lipman Series 2021] March 5, 2021
    In this week's episode of the PONARS Eurasia Podcast, Maria Lipman chats with Felix Light and Nikolay Petrov about the contemporary Communist Party of the Russian Federation, including the divisions between its leadership and membership, its attitude toward Alexei Navalny, and why it might be more than just "systemic" opposition after all.
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New Policy Memo: Belarus’ Renewed Subordination to Russia: Unconditional Surrender or Hard Bargain?

  • August 8, 2014
  • Arkady Moshes

July 20 was the twentieth anniversary of Alexander Lukashenko’s inauguration as president of Belarus. Over these two decades, his country has performed a unique balancing act.

On the one hand, Belarus has declared itself Russia’s most loyal ally and asserted its readiness to join any reintegration initiative Moscow proposes, including the ostensibly bilateral “Union State” that was created in 1999. In return, Belarus has obtained colossal economic benefits that have kept its unreformed economy afloat.

On the other hand, Lukashenko emphasizes the primacy of his country’s national sovereignty. He has flirted with European neighbours, and Belarus has even joined the European Union’s Eastern Partnership program. Russian expectations that Minsk’s political advances toward Moscow would be followed by economic openings for Russian business have largely remained unmet. At times, “Russia’s best ally” has even resorted to harsh undiplomatic rhetoric and deliberately provoked conflicts in order to wrest concessions from Moscow in exchange for a return to “normal” relations.

Events in the first half of 2014 have significantly altered this balance. Russia’s annexation of Crimea in March demonstrated that Moscow is prepared to use hard power over economic incentives and sees enforced partnership as a more effective instrument of policy than buying loyalty. The May 2014 signing of the agreement forming the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) demonstrated that Lukashenko cannot escape the deepening of Belarus’ institutional integration with Russia, regardless of how he may feel about any given institutional arrangement. Arguably, events in Ukraine and the creation of the EEU have qualitatively limited Minsk’s freedom of manoeuver and, for the foreseeable future, changed Belarus’ foreign policy paradigm. Bargaining and retaining economic privileges are still possible, but a complete rejection of what Vladimir Putin sees as critically important is not.

See the full text | PDF

Arkady Moshes
Website | + posts
Director of the EU's Eastern Neighbourhood and Russia Programme

Affiliation

Finnish Institute of International Affairs (FIIA)

Links

Finnish Institute of International Affairs (Bio)

Expertise

Russia-EU Relations, Internal and Foreign Policy of Ukraine and Belarus
  • Arkady Moshes
    https://www.ponarseurasia.org/members/arkady-moshes/
    Forever Together? Relations Between Moscow and Minsk After the Belarusian Revolution of 2020
  • Arkady Moshes
    https://www.ponarseurasia.org/members/arkady-moshes/
    Belarus Protests Have Explosive Potential for EU-Russia Relations
  • Arkady Moshes
    https://www.ponarseurasia.org/members/arkady-moshes/
    Лукашенко отказался уходить и пообещал новую Конституцию вместо выборов
  • Arkady Moshes
    https://www.ponarseurasia.org/members/arkady-moshes/
    Belarus without Lukashenko: How it became a realistic scenario
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  • Belarus
  • Moshes
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