Bangkok Post

Russia’s circle of allies shrinks

Longtime partner Czech Republic displays shift in Moscow relations, write Lenka Ponikelska and Andrea Dudik

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Vladimir Putin may have lost one of his closest allies in Europe as politician­s in the Czech Republic are finally uniting against Russia.

By blaming Moscow for a deadly explosion and expelling 18 embassy staffers, leaders in Prague underscore­d escalating Western concern about Mr Putin’s actions as the US sanctions Russia for hacking and election interferen­ce, Russian troops mass on the Ukrainian border and the health of imprisoned dissident Alexey Navalny worsens.

The accusation­s signal a shift from the divided foreign policy in a country that Russia has used to increase influence among members of Nato and the European Union. While government­s in the Czech Republic have traditiona­lly stuck with their allies, the president, Milos Zeman, has been one of Europe’s biggest advocates for closer ties with Moscow and Beijing since coming to power in 2013.

Mr Zeman has wielded his largely ceremonial role to criticise efforts by the US and EU to penalise Mr Putin for Russia’s involvemen­t in the conflict in Ukraine and the poisoning of former Russian agent Sergei Skripal in the United Kingdom. But in a rare act of unity, Mr Zeman took the government’s side against Mr Putin.

“The president has all the informatio­n at hand,” presidenti­al spokesman Jiri Ovcacek said on Twitter. “The highest constituti­onal representa­tives are acting in coordinati­on.”

Prime Minister Andrej Babis said the government had the president’s “absolute” support.

DIPLOMATS CAST OUT

The Czechs ejected 18 diplomats — an unpreceden­ted number — after linking Moscow’s GRU intelligen­ce service to the October 2014 explosion at a munitions warehouse in the southeast of the country. The government likened the blast, which killed two workers and caused hundreds to be evacuated from surroundin­g villages, to the 2018 assassinat­ion attempt against Mr Skripal.

Russia rejected the accusation­s and retaliated by kicking 20 Czech diplomats out of Moscow, a response that has become common in the era of Mr Putin’s expansioni­st foreign policy. The Czechs’ decision was based on “made-up pretexts,” the Foreign Ministry in Moscow said, accusing Prague of bowing to pressure from Washington.

“In their haste to please the U.S. after the recent American sanctions against Russia, the Czech authoritie­s have even outdone their overseas masters,” the ministry said in a statement.

The Czech Republic has long been a favoured partner for Russia, even as sentiment toward Moscow is largely negative among Czechs who blame the Soviet Union for keeping them locked out of western prosperity during four decades of communism.

Foreign Minister Jan Hamacek offered last week to host a summit between United States President Joe

Biden and Mr Putin in Prague to ease tensions between the two superpower­s, but the chance of that happening now is slim.

“We have to eliminate the growing Russian influence in Czech political, cultural and economic spheres,” Czech Senate President Milos Vystrcil said on Sunday. “Yesterday we found out from the prime minister that these warnings were not in vain.”

The biggest shift that would matter would be with Mr Zeman. He has pushed for more engagement.

VACCINES, REACTORS

The president approved the dismissal of Health Minister Jan Blatny this month after accusing him of letting more people to die from Covid-19 by refusing to use Russian and Chinese vaccines.

The alleged meddling may have a significan­t business impact as well. While Mr Zeman has been a vocal advocate of Russian companies taking part in the US$7 billion (218 billion baht) expansion of the Dukovany nuclear plant, Czech politician­s from both sides of the aisle rushed to say it’s now almost certain that Russia will be excluded from the tender.

Shortly after Mr Babis alleged Russia’s involvemen­t on Saturday, Czech police said they’re searching for two men who were in the country at the time of the deadly explosion in 2014, using Russian passports with names that UK police have linked to GRU agents who poisoned Mr Skripal four years later.

“This is a great blow to Czech-Russian relations,” Tomas Pojar, a former Czech diplomat, said by phone. “Russia will now try to defend itself.”

 ??  ?? Vystrcil: ‘Eliminate growing influence’
Vystrcil: ‘Eliminate growing influence’

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