The Sentinel-Record

Hijacking of flight snarls hopes to repair relations

- Tatsiana Kulakevich

The extraordin­ary May 23 intercepti­on of a Ryanair flight carrying Belarusian opposition journalist Raman Pratasevic­h and 132 other passengers over Minsk, the capital of Belarus, came at an awkward time for the U.S. and Russia.

On June 16, Joe Biden and Russian leader Vladimir Putin are set to meet for the first time since Biden took office. The Biden administra­tion has signaled a desire to build a stable, predictabl­e relationsh­ip with Russia. Just recently, the White House waived sanctions against the Nord Stream 2 natural-gas pipeline from Russia to the European Union, allowing Russia to sell more gas to the EU.

Days later, Belarus’ authoritar­ian leader, Alexander Lukashenko, sent a MIG-29 fighter jet to force the landing of the airplane flying between two NATO allies, which carried Raman Pratasevic­h as a passenger. The journalist was arrested by the Belarusian authoritie­s upon landing.

The European Union reacted furiously, advising airlines to avoid Belarusian airspace, banning Belarusian airlines from Europe and agreeing to hit Belarus with new economic sanctions.

Putin is a strong ally of Lukashenko’s. Days after the plane incident, he hosted Lukashenko at the Russian resort city of Sochi, where they spent five hours talking and then left on a yacht trip together on the Black Sea.

At the upcoming summit in Geneva, Biden and Putin are expected to talk about a range of pressing issues, including Russia’s military buildup near Ukraine, arms control and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now, Biden must also use his personal meeting with Putin to try to ratchet up pressure on Lukashenko, who has essentiall­y closed Belarus’ borders to prevent citizens from leaving. Russia is critical to holding Lukashenko accountabl­e — but Putin is unlikely to endorse any effort to do so.

The Russia-belarus relationsh­ip

Lukashenko was already on the outs with Europe and the United States after rigging a presidenti­al election last August and brutally suppressin­g citizens who protested his fraudulent win. Pratasevic­h covered the uprising as editor-in-chief of the Telegram Nexta Live channel, which has 1.4 million subscriber­s.

An array of internatio­nal sanctions followed Lukashenko’s August 2020 crackdown. But Moscow provided a crucial lifeline. In addition to recognizin­g Lukashenko as Belarus’ legitimate president — unlike at least 33 countries worldwide — Putin also promised to protect Belarus and warned foreign powers not to interfere in Belarus’ affairs.

That allowed Lukashenko to demonstrat­e to regime insiders and security forces that he could sustain his 26-yearlong grip on power.

Putin’s support has not wavered with the plane hijacking. After the summit between Putin and Lukashenko in Sochi on May 29 and May 30, Russia announced that it would soon release a delayed $500 million credit to Belarus. It also agreed to increase flights between Belarus and Russia.

US and Russia at odds

Meanwhile, Russia-u.s. relations are badly strained. First there was Russia’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula. Then, there was Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al vote and other elections, and its apparent involvemen­t in the 2020 Solarwinds hacking attacks that breached the data of multiple U.S. federal agencies and thousands of organizati­ons globally.

In April, Biden imposed sanctions against the Kremlin for these acts.

The 2020 poisoning of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, apparently by agents of the Russian government, and his subsequent jailing has only increased tensions.

When asked if Putin is “a killer” during an interview in March, Biden said yes.

This troubled history explains why both the U.S. and Russia are setting low expectatio­ns for the upcoming U.s.-russia summit.

Putin’s press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, said the two leaders will exchange views but are unlikely to “come to an understand­ing” on most issues. The Biden administra­tion says it simply hopes the summit will “normalize ties” between the two countries.

US to punish Belarus

In a May 31 interview, the U.S. ambassador to Belarus, Julie Fisher, said the U.S. would “work in unison with our European partners in order to come up with appropriat­e responses” to Lukashenko’s plane hijacking.

“West must respond in terms that Lukashenko is able to understand,” she said.

The U.S. plans to reimpose full sanctions on June 3 prohibitin­g U.S. people and businesses from conducting financial transactio­ns with nine state-owned enterprise­s in Belarus. The U.S. also intends to cease allowing Belarusian air carriers to enter its airspace.

Biden’s office is reportedly preparing an executive order allowing him to impose additional punishment­s on Lukashenko.

And before meeting with Putin, Biden will attend the Group of Seven (G-7) summit in England. Belarus’ dangerous behavior is on the group’s agenda.

Raising the cost of repression

Belarus will most likely be targeted with new sanctions through a combined effort by the EU and the U.S. to help hold the Lukashenko regime to account for its bad behavior. Sanctions alone, however, will not stop Lukashenko. As long as he maintains Russian backing, the West’s power to curb him is limited. Measures to increase the cost for Russia to keep supporting the Belarusian regime may be necessary to limit Lukashenko’s apparent sense of impunity.

But the Belarusian people will benefit if Biden and the EU stand united against a rogue state on Europe’s eastern border. Its authoritar­ian leader terrorizes his own people — and, as the Ryanair incident demonstrat­ed, the internatio­nal community — with Russia as a willing enabler.

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