Colored Revolutions and "Regime Change": Washington
Attempts to Destabilize Belarus
by
Michèle Brand
On
June 29 and 30, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was in Vilnius, Lithuania
to participate in a meeting of the "Community of Democracies” and to visit one
of the many US-funded international "tech camps.” These camps host "civil
society” (i.e.opposition) activists from various nations whose governments the
US doesn’t appreciate, and teach them internet and social network organizing
skills to be used toward fostering, in official words, "democratic transition,”
or more correctly, color revolutions and regime change. According to the AP,
"Much of the democracy meeting’s opening day dealt with the new mechanics of
protest, such as social media networks.” During her visit Clinton stated that "The United States has
invested $50 million in supporting internet freedom and we’ve trained more than
5,000 activists worldwide.” This is of course in addition to the hundreds of
millions that the US
spends in other ways attempting to destabilize its enemies and to force
"democratic transitions.”
The
choice of Vilnius
was not by chance: it lies 30 kilometers from the Belarusian border. This
tech camp is hosting 85 activists from the region, "primarily from Belarus.” Belarus is
currently being targeted by a concerted effort towards an orange revolution,
financed and remote-controlled by the West. Simultaneously, the country is
being subjected to a relatively new pressure from the East: certain Russian
elements have apparently decided that Belarus and its profitable
state-owned enterprises should belong to them, and are contributing in their
own way to the effort to destabilize the government.
I’ve
just returned to Paris from a second extended
trip to Belarus.
Western media faithfully relay the monstrous picture of Belarus that
our governments want to convey, and so I’d like to report on the situation in
this little-known country, and encourage others to visit it in order to
experience for themselves the Belarusian culture, economy, hospitality and
character. Among other visits I attended an international conference on the
resistance to Nazi fascism, in Brest on June 22,
the 70th anniversary of the Nazi invasion of the Soviet
Union. In a country which lost between a third and a quarter of
its population during the war, the memory of the ravages of foreign attacks and
the heroism of those who resisted it is very strong and alive. Located
dangerously between Europe and Russia,
entirely flat and endowed with few natural resources, Belarus has
fought hard to build a successful independent state. It is not inclined to lose
its sovereignty now.
The
United States
and other Western countries have been attacking the government of President
Alexander Lukashenko ever since it refused to follow the path of the other
ex-Soviet countries in the 1990s, which famously sold off the state-owned
industries to oligarchs, destroyed the social protection system and allowed
kleptocratic mafia capitalism to take over. Under Lukashenko, Belarus has
developped gradually into a strong socially-oriented market economy with the
highest growth rate in the CIS even during its current financial troubles
(according to the CIS Interstate Statistical Committee, between January and
April 2011 Belarusian industry grew 12.9% year-on-year), while still
maintaining its free health care, job protection, social services, retirement
programs, low unemployment, state-subsidized housing and utilities, and high
level of education. This is one reason why the country is naturally in the line
of fire of the West, whose bankrupt governments are now obsessively telling
their citizens that "there is no alternative”: we must drastically decrease or
kill pensions and other social programs, fire government employees, flexibilize
the work force, privatize education, health care, infrastructure and everything
possible, etc. etc. Located just next door to crisis-stricken Europe, Belarus is more
than a thorn in its side; it is living proof that European and American
neoliberal propaganda is only lies.
This
seems to be one reason that the attacks against the Belarusian economic model
and its government have recently gone into higher gear. Its economy is an
isolated pocket of export-oriented production next to the Western economies of
consumption. Belarus was the
most highly industrialized area in the Soviet Union,
manufacturing machines, petroleum and chemical products for the whole Soviet
sphere and receiving its energy and raw materials from the East. 75% of the
economy is exports; 80% is state-owned production, and there are many
public-private partnerships. Smaller businesses are mainly private. The country
has recently benefitted from a good deal of foreign investment, for example
from China, which has
invested in infrastructure projects and with whom Belarus has a unique commercial
credit swap program. GDP grew 7.6% in 2010. Signs of growth are to be seen
everywhere, much more so than during my first visit to the country two years
ago, and the skyline of Minsk
is dotted with cranes.
The
first impression one has of Belarus
is how clean it is -- there’s hardly a cigarette butt on the street -- and the
second is the immense number of trees and parks in the cities. (The third might
be, depending on whether one had presuppositions about the country being a late
Soviet backwater, the modern cars, cell phones and cosmopolitan way of life of
its citizens.) Belarusian cuisine is healthy and delicious; agricultural
products are local, low-chemical and inexpensive. The food distribution system
is not parasited by rapacious large private distributors. The tomatoes are
actually red inside and have a real tomato flavor, not whitish inside and
tasteless like in the West. The country’s Gini coefficient, measuring income
equality, is excellent (29.7, much better than France
or the US, or its neighbors Russia and Poland). The country is attracting
immigrants from other CIS states who are fleeing their countries’ corruption,
crime and drugs in favor of Belarus’
low crime, low unemployment, social services, clean streets and green cities.
These
are some of the reasons that the government of President Lukashenko is
genuinely popular among the majority of Belarusians, who naturally compare
their society’s development over 20 years to that of their neighbors. And it is
this popularity that poses a problem for the West and its desire for "democratic”
regime change.
Western
governments claim that the presidential election of last December 19 was
fraudulent, and use this to justify their recent round of attacks. I have
spoken with a number of international observers of that election who affirm
that they saw no fraud or irregularities, and exit polls confirmed that the
majority of Belarusians voted to reelect President Lukashenko. One such report
can be read here: http://www.counterpunch.org/shamir12312010.html. The CIS
observers reported that they had witnessed a fair election, while the OSCE,
predictably, stated the opposite. The selective coverage of this election in
Western media is astounding, and to understand the events I recommend this
short documentary: "Ploshcha: Beating Glass with Iron”
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JFKHrZPfCqg). For about a month before the
election the major opposition candidates were spending more time calling on
their supporters to protest in a central square in Minsk on the evening of the election, than on
campaigning in a normal way by outlining their policies and calling on people
to vote. On the evening of the election at around 7:00, before voting stations
had closed and well before the results were announced, the opposition groups
rallied in October Square in Minsk, the traditional place for demonstrations,
flying the blue European flag and the red and white former Belarusian flag,
symbol of the opposition. Then the presidential candidates called on their
supporters to head to the central government building "and ask them to vacate
the offices,” and led a crowd of around 7,000 to Independence Square, just in front of the
Parliament. It should be said in passing that out of 1.3 million voters in Minsk, this is a small
number. Opposition candidates proceded to announce that they contested the
election results and to proclaim they were forming a new government, the
"government of rescue,” reading a printed statement clearly prepared in
advance, before results were announced. The police did not interfere with the
rally until a large group of well-prepared individuals forcibly tried to enter
the Parliament building, using metal rods and shovels. It could have been
worse: in the weeks before the election, Belarusian border authorities had
seized a number of cargoes of metal rods, grenades, knives, guns, and
explosives. The police intervened and prevented what was clearly an attempt at
a coup d’état, following the pattern used in the "tulip revolution” in Kyrgyzstan in
2005. Opposition representatives later claimed that the attack on the
Parliament was done by government provocateurs, but many of those arrested and
/ or filmed trying to break into the Parliament were identified as having
relations with various opposition groups.
The
goal was apparently twofold: either seize power by occupying the buildings, or
if not, at least get international media footage of combat between police and
protesters, preferably with blood. Though there were no major injuries, the
second goal was obtained since now Western governments and media call this a
"violent crackdown” on an opposition rally, and accuse the government of
breaching human rights. The hypocrisy of the West, who (with Russia) paid
for the campaigns of much of the Belarusian opposition, and who try to foster a
"democratic” transition by violently overturning a democratic electoral
process, is extraordinary. As many know well, the US has no lessons to give on human
rights. I have directly experienced the way in which the US police protect the
human rights of non-violent protesters, for example on April 16, 2000 in front of the
Treasury building in Washington, when riot cops violently dispersed a group of
non-violent activists sitting in the street to protest the policies of the
World Bank and IMF, and a young man near me who couldn’t crawl away fast enough
had 3 ribs broken by a riot cop’s bludgeon. It seems that the Belarusian
police, given the destruction of government property and attempt to take over
Parliament, were very restrained. The people still imprisoned after the events
of December 19, including 3 ex-candidates, were convicted of participation in
or instigation of the riot. Imagine the reaction if a similar event had taken
place at the Capitol building.
Many
of the ex-presidential candidates (there were 10 candidates in all) have
well-documented relations with the West, which isn’t surprising given the
millions that the US and Europe spend on
"democratic transition” in the country. They generally call for privatization
of state enterprises, liberalization of the economy and adhesion to NATO. A
number of them have spent time studying regime change at the George C. Marshall
Center European Center for Security Studies in Germany, a partnership between
the US military (US European Command) and the German government, which,
according to the US embassy in Minsk, hosts 25 Belarusians per year. Since
2001, the US
has enacted a series of Belarus Democracy Acts, applying economic sanctions,
visa blacklists and asset freezes on government-related people and companies,
and providing tens of millions of dollars per year for the promotion of
"democracy.” In February of this year, citing the recent elections, the US
State Department announced an increase of its "democracy assistance” to
Belarusian civil society by 30% to $15 million for the year. In 2009, the
National Endowment for Democracy gave $2.7 million to finance Belarusian
"independent” media, civil society (promoting "democratic ideas and values...
and a market economy”), NGOs and political groups. A Wikileaks cable (VILNIUS 000732, dated June 12, 2005) confirmed money
smuggling into Belarus
on the part of USAID contractors, though such proof is hardly necessary. Also
in February, the EU, individual European countries, Canada
and the US put together a
"war chest” of 87 million euros aiming toward regime change in Belarus. With
so much money being offered to anyone who wants a job as an activist, it’s not
hard to find takers. Youth who run into trouble are offered free education in
the West. There is evidence that many of those who partook in the violent acts
of the night of December 19th were paid for their participation, by either
Western or Russian elements.
For
the West is not the only source of financing, nor of interventionist pressure. One
of the most important ex-candidates was financed by the Russians. While Western
pressure is a known quantity in Belarus,
Russian attempts at destabilization are relatively new. Russian oligarchs have
been ogling the profitable Belarusian state enterprises, and since the
government has historically refused to sell them, the Russian kleptocracy has
begun to try to topple Lukashenko. The Russian media have begun a concerted
campaign against the Belarusian government, airing pro-opposition documentaries
and indulging in smearing and misinformation. Russian operatives are now making
inroads; on the Minsk-Moscow highway, my Belarusian friend pointed out the
expensive Russian cars with tinted black windows heading into Minsk. Russian oil prices have risen sharply
-- 30% in January -- and the price of natural gas imported from Russia has
quadrupled in four years. Although the economy has diversified since
independence, it is still reliant on importing energy and raw materials for its
production. The hike in energy and commodity prices has had a harsh impact in Belarus, where
the cost of energy now makes up 78 cents of every dollar of goods produced. High
commodity prices explain the trade deficit despite strong industrial and export
growth.
In
January of this year, at the same time that the Russians severely raised oil
prices, Belarus
was subjected to a major speculative attack on its currency. The Russians
control 37% of the country’s banking sector, and according to analysts in Minsk, early this year
Russian banks started to sell off their Belarusian rubles. In January, 50 times
more foreign currency was bought with Belarusian rubles than in December, and
that pattern continued in February and March. This sparked the effect desired:
inflation of 33% in the first half of the year, general panic and a run on the
bank where people tried to convert their Belarusian rubles into dollars or
gold. The central bank was obliged to devalue the Belarusian ruble by 36%. The
government has not printed currency, contrary to some media reports. The
speculative attacks have not been covered in the news; Ria Novosti for example
typically stated that "the Belarusian ruble collapsed in the first five months
of the year as the result of a large trade deficit, generous wage increases and
loans granted by the government ahead of the December 2010 presidential
elections, which spurred strong demand for foreign currency.” But the trade
deficit is not new and would not itself spark a currency collapse, while wage
increases or loans would not logically provoke a demand for foreign currency.
According
to Minsk residents, the main problem this Spring has not been a lack of
products on the shelves, as one reads in the West, but rising prices, a
shortage of foreign currency and hoarding, which has somewhat disrupted the
supply chain. When I was there in mid-late June, the shelves were fully
stocked, the stores and markets were full of shoppers and there were no lines
at gas stations, contrary to what Western media have been reporting. Inflation
is apparently stabilizing now. Protests on the Western borders by cross-border
traders have been widely covered by Western media who are seeking signs of
unrest, but who rarely show that the traffic of cheap Belarusian products and
gasoline for sale at a profit in the West is a practice that is harmful for the
Belarusian economy, especially in the context of the current economic
difficulties. This is why the government recently limited such border crossings
to once every 5 days (formerly traders would often go 5 times per day) and to
limit the products that can be individually exported. The scarcity of foreign
currency explains the late payment of bills to the Russian electricity supplier
(which demands payment in dollars), prompting it to temporarily halt delivery
of electricity to Belarus
a number of times recently. This strong-arming, reported extensively in the
international press, is more bark than bite since Russia only provides around
12% of Belarusian electricity and there have been no blackouts.
Because
of the spiraling Belarusian ruble, the government has had to seek foreign
loans. It has appealed to the IMF for a loan of $8 billion, though the IMF
replied on June 13 that a loan would come with the usual strings attached --
structural adjustment programs, privatizations, a freeze on salaries, letting
the Belarusian ruble float, etc. The IMF admonishes the government that it has
not yet enacted similar conditions that were set with the last loan it received
in 2009 during the world financial crisis; for example, a government agency to
oversee privatizations was created but no privatizations carried out. On the
other hand, it was rarely reported that the IMF also hailed measures by Belarus'
government to end the country's financial crisis, for example raising interest
rates and supporting the unemployed and poor.
Whether
the country will get an IMF loan or not, the traditional refusal to privatize
is now ending, since the country was granted a $3 billion emergency loan from
the Russian-controlled Eurasian Economic Community, which also had strings
attached for the privatization of $7.5 billion of state enterprises over 3
years. This is part of what the Russian oligarchs have been working toward. The
first disbursement of this loan, $800 million, was released on June 21, putting
an end to the immediate financial problems. However, the Russians may not be
getting the cheap deals they had wanted, nor will they necessarily be the
beneficiaries of the privatizations. The actual sales and IPOs are in
negotiation, and President Lukashenko has been very clear that by Belarusian
law, privatizations of state enterprises must follow strict conditions. On June
17th, he stated, "The conditions have been spelt out: the company should
develop, it should not be closed, the workers' pay should increase each year,
they should be protected socially and, most importantly, the company should be
modernized. That is, if you come and buy it, you should invest in its
development.” On June 30, Venezuela,
with whom Belarus has close
economic and diplomatic ties (among other agreements, Venezuela has provided oil to Belarus),
announced its interest in acquiring shares in Belarusian state companies. Analysts
in Minsk say that the country is reorienting
itself away from Russia and
toward China.
An IPO on foreign stock exchanges of a minority stake in the huge state potash
and fertilizer company, Belaruskali, is in preparation, and the national gas
pipeline will most likely be sold to Gazprom. Other state enterprises are on
the block, and the future is unknown; but President Lukashenko stated recently
that "I would like to give you firm assurances that we will not accept risky
experiments or an unacceptable lowering of living standards. We will continue
implementing a Belarusian economic model, which has proved to be stable under
different and complex circumstances for over 15 years.”
The
economy seems to be showing signs of stabilizing now. Despite the recent
financial troubles, Belarus’
debt remains at an impressively low level: including the recent loan, public
debt will not exceed 45% of GDP, including both domestic and foreign public
debt. The foreign debt ceiling is 25% of GDP. The government has reported a
slight trade surplus of $116 million in May, apparently because of import
restrictions enacted this Spring. The finance ministry has recently lowered its
2011 GDP growth forecast to 4.5% and the World Bank has recently lowered it to
2.5%; at even 2.5%, the economy is clearly resisting. The World Bank added that
the Belarusian economic model isn’t viable; rather it should be more concerned
with the US
model of credit-based consumption and skyrocketing foreign debt.
In
June, coinciding with these financial problems, Western governments returned to
the attack, as though to take advantage of the momentum to destabilize the Belarusian
government. On June 14, President Obama renewed and reinforced US sanctions
against the country, declaring a "national emergency” (that is, for the US, not Belarus)
and citing, incredibly, "the unusual and extraordinary threat to the national
security and foreign policy of the United States”
that Belarus
constitutes. The only way in which he may be right is simply in that the
success of the Belarusian economic model constitutes a threat to neoliberal
dogma. It is also possible that for Obama the country represents a "threat” to US foreign policy by being located next to Russia, and it
may be caught within escalating US and Russian tensions over NATO and the
missile shield. If the US
could manage to install a Western-friendly government in Belarus, it would be a great step forward in its
attempt to surround Russia,
which has close military ties with Belarus and whose own missile
shield is located there.
Be
this as it may, the sanctions are coming from all sides. On June 17, the UN
Human Rights Council voted to condemn "human rights violations” following the
recent presidential election. On June 20, the European Union in their turn
reinforced its sanctions against Belarus, adding companies and names
to the blacklist (the Belarusian government has stated its intention to sue the
initiators of the sanctions), and the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development has reoriented its financing activities away from the government
and toward "civil society.”
And
"civil society” hasn’t missed the opportunity provided by US tech camps and the
recent financial troubles. Since the beginning of June, there has been a new
movement on the part of various opposition groups in Belarus, calling itself "revolution
through social networks.” They have taken to weekly protests in the central
streets organized on the internet or by twitter in which participants clap
their hands, without banners or chanting. Since the violence of December 19th,
protests have been prohibited in the central area of Minsk, though they are allowed in certain
other areas of the city. Whatever one thinks of this prohibition, it is clear
that these protests consist of the same pro-Western, well-financed groups with
a new, high-tech face. According to Western media, the protests are being
violently repressed and protesters arbitrarily arrested. According to
Belarusian authorities, participants have been arrested because they were
shouting profanities at police and pushing them. I unfortunately didn’t happen
to see one of the protests while I was in Belarus recently, and can’t
personally report more details about them. A number of videos of the protests
are available on the web, and I’ve seen no violence in them, no raised billy
clubs and no blood; one can see protesters being arrested but not what immediately
preceded the arrests. If there were major police violence, one could be sure
that images of it would be all over the web. Of course, the government should
make images available showing that it is violent participants who are arrested,
since the arrests only play into the protesters’ hands and give Western
governments more fodder for sanctions. The number of participants is unclear
from the videos, which are usually closely framed shots. One video claiming to
show a clapping protest was clearly not one, as within the clapping crowd
(probably an audience applauding an outdoors show) one can see the red and
green Belarusian flag, which is never used by those who protest the government
-- they fly the former red and white national flag as well as the European blue
one.
I
did speak to people, including youth, about the protests. One young man, when
he learned that I was from the US,
said to me, "Flashmob! Fun!” giving me the thumbs up. For him, it was clearly
more of a fun public gathering with drums, stomping and clapping, than a real
political statement. Another young man told me, "When I read Western media, I
wonder, is this my country? Am I in a war zone?” What is clear in the videos is
that the crowd is well-off. Belarusian participants in Clinton’s tech camp said as much; according
to the AP, they "described the active opposition as largely limited to students
and educated citizens. The movement needs the support of working class people,
said the activists.” Clearly, the Belarusian working class has reasons not to
support the current movements: they are generally satisfied with the policies
of President Lukashenko. If the movements are limited to the Western-oriented
elite, Western or Russian financed operatives, and youth wanting to have a
street party, then they have no future, no matter how many millions the US and others
throw at them.
On
July 6, the US House renewed the Belarus Democracy Act, sponsored by Rep.
Christopher Smith of New Jersey,
chairman of the Helsinki Commission. During the debate, Rep. Ron Paul denounced
it. He said:
"I
rise in opposition to the Belarus Democracy Act reauthorization. This title of
this bill would have amused George Orwell, as it is in fact a US
regime-change bill. Where does the United States Congress derive the moral or
legal authority to determine which political parties or organizations in
Belarus -- or anywhere else -- are to be US-funded and which are to be
destabilized? How can anyone argue that US
support for regime-change in Belarus
is somehow promoting democracy? We pick the parties who are to be supported and
funded and somehow this is supposed to reflect the will of the Belarusian
people? How would Americans feel if the tables were turned and a powerful
foreign country demanded that only a political party it selected and funded
could legitimately reflect the will of the American people? I would like to
know how many millions of taxpayer dollars the US
government has wasted trying to overthrow the government in Belarus. I
would like to know how much money has been squandered by US government-funded
front organizations like the National Endowment for Democracy, the
International Republican Institute, Freedom House, and others.... It is the
arrogance of our foreign policy establishment that leads to this kind of
schizophrenic legislation, where we demand that the rest of the world bend to
the will of US
foreign policy and we call it democracy. We wonder why we are no longer loved
and admired overseas. Finally, I strongly object to the sanctions that this
legislation imposes on Belarus.
We must keep in mind that sanctions and blockades of foreign countries are
considered acts of war. Do we need to continue war-like actions against yet
another country? Can we afford it? [...] We have no constitutional authority to
intervene in the wholly domestic affairs of Belarus or any other sovereign
nation.”
I
can only agree wholeheartedly, and wish the government and the people of Belarus courage
in their resistance to the current attacks, and success in protecting their independence.
At the international conference in Brest
on the resistance to Nazism, participants described again and again the heroic
courage and strength of the Belarusian people during the war years under the
invasion coming from the West. Belarusians will need to continue to draw on
that strong character for some time to come, as the attacks are not yet
finished, but they have proven they are up to the fight.
Michèle Brand is an independent journalist and researcher originally from the US,
living in Paris.
She can be reached at michbrand@free.fr.
Original site is: «Global Research»
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