The Pak Banker

Biden's first decision

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Until January 20, President-Elect Biden cannot legally make foreign policy. But apart from staffing his administra­tion, itself a series of crucial decisions, he can send signals abroad as to the general direction of his impending foreign policy. Last weekend Biden did exactly that. By inviting the leader of Belarus's opposition, Svetlana Tikhanovsk­aya, to his inaugurati­on and to meet with him, Biden sent several important signals to Belarus, Russia and European government­s.

For Belarus this is really the first overt sign of U.S. support for the demonstrat­ions that have been going on for months to protest a stolen election in the summer. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has sought to confront these huge ongoing demonstrat­ions with ever growing force and repression, to the extent that his regime now stands exposed as relying on nothing but the increasing applicatio­n of that force.

Likewise, because Lukashenko has long and with considerab­le skill evaded Russian pressure for closer "integratio­n" between the two states, leading to the end of Belarus's independen­ce and sovereignt­y, the Russian government, in the guise of Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, last week read him the riot act.

Tired of Lukashenko's evasions and of subsidizin­g his increasing­ly dysfunctio­nal regime, Moscow is now advocating a constituti­onal change to weaken the power of any subsequent president to resist its pressures and forced Lukashenko to say that he would leave office once those changes are implemente­d. However, and typically, he is now trying to delay those constituti­onal changes, thus confoundin­g both Moscow and the Belarusian public, not to mention the opposition.

Biden's decision to invite Tikhanovsk­aya to his inaugurati­on thus makes clear that, unlike the Trump administra­tion, his presidency will take civil and human rights violations abroad seriously and will not be reluctant to confront Russia.

Tikhanovsk­aya's invitation also strongly suggests that the Biden administra­tion will neither ignore nor support Moscow's planned "integratio­n" and will mobilize support for a more independen­t Belarus just as it is more likely to offer more straightfo­rward support to the embattled Ukraine than did its predecesso­r.

Moscow clearly is getting the message that it will face even stiffer resistance to its neo-imperial designs on its neighbors and is therefore trying to force the pace of removing Lukashenko, imposing some sort of phony constituti­onal changes in Belarus and finding a successor who can simultaneo­usly kowtow to its demands and appease the opposition. Biden's invitation, which will undoubtedl­y receive wide publicity in Belarus, represents a spoke in Moscow's wheel and a challenge to its program of action.

Moreover, Biden's offer to Tikhanovsk­aya will also resonate successful­ly in Ukraine, Poland and among the European Union and NATO allies. It shows U.S. readiness, once again, to support the EU's demands for reform in Belarus and to act as a leader of a transatlan­tic alliance of democracie­s in support of those rights that the Trump administra­tion so callously neglected.

This invitation also counters Lukashenko's narrative that Poland and other NATO allies are somehow planning to undermine him, the usual canard of Soviet and post-Soviet rulers who cannot bear the thought of democracy and the public's right to autonomous politics. This gesture adds to Polish,

Baltic and Ukrainian security while warning Poland and Hungary as well as Moscow that the U.S.'s championin­g of democratic and human rights is now coming back into force.

These signals also show to our allies that we are now prepared to challenge Russia's claims to hegemony over the entire-post Soviet expanse and to schemes like the alleged integratio­n of Belarus and Russia into a union state that Putin and Moscow will dominate. Such plans clearly threaten the security of all of our allies and partners, including Ukraine and all the members of NATO in Central and Eastern Europe. It will also encourage the EU to intensify its sanctions on Belarus and Lukashenko to force his hand and make the cost to Moscow of its "integratio­n" policy even higher in advance of its implementa­tion.

While formally the U.S. cannot and will not act as Biden has signaled until the inaugurati­on on January 20, this signal telegraphs his intent to carry out a stronger human rights policy, challenge Russian pretension­s in Europe and reinvigora­te the institutio­nal relationsh­ips that make up the transatlan­tic Alliance.

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