A peace deal on Ukraine without Belarus risks Rus­sian annex­a­tion

As dip­lo­matic efforts to chart a path to peace in Ukraine intensify, one crit­ical ele­ment remains over­looked. Last­ing peace in Europe is impossible if Belarus is left out­side any agree­ment.


Read full article in Independent - https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/belarus-ukraine-peace-deal-russia-annexation-b2878884.html


On the eve of the inva­sion, Alex­an­der Lukashenko – Belarus’s first and only pres­id­ent since 1994 – assured Ukraine and the inter­na­tional com­munity that no attack would come from Belarus­ian ter­rit­ory. Yet, just days later, Rus­sian columns entered from Belarus in a dir­ect betrayal of Ukraine and the Belarus­ian people, who oppose par­ti­cip­a­tion in this war. Mis­siles were launched, air­craft flew from Belarus­ian air­fields, and Rus­sian forces received logist­ical and rear sup­port. Sev­eral coun­tries have recog­nised Belarus as a co-aggressor in Rus­sia’s inva­sion of Ukraine.


Belarus stretches approx­im­ately 1,080km along Ukraine’s north­ern bor­der. It is the shortest route to Kyiv and a dir­ect mis­sile cor­ridor toward Nato coun­tries. As long as Belarus remains an unreg­u­lated mil­it­ary space, Europe’s secur­ity archi­tec­ture con­tains a fun­da­mental breach.


Exclud­ing Belarus from any future agree­ment would there­fore leave a gap­ing hole in the peace of the con­tin­ent. What was exploited once can be exploited again – not only against Ukraine, but Poland, Lithuania or Latvia. As long as Rus­sian forces can freely use the ter­rit­ory, any “peace” is noth­ing more than a tem­por­ary cease­fire wrapped in dip­lo­matic lan­guage.


If Belarus were to be fully or par­tially absorbed by Rus­sia, the Krem­lin would gain a dir­ect cor­ridor to exert pres­sure across cent­ral and north­ern Europe. The Rus­sian army could deploy large forces along Nato bor­ders and threaten Ukraine from the north, sig­ni­fic­antly com­plic­at­ing its secur­ity even after the cur­rent war ends. This would cre­ate a per­man­ent source of ten­sion and render any peace agree­ment incom­plete and unstable.


The Belarus­ian people do not sup­port this war. In 2020, around 200,000 people took to the streets for months to protest against the stolen elec­tion and to demand Lukashenko’s resig­na­tion. Only through the Krem­lin’s sup­port and massive repres­sion was he able to cling to power.


The Belarus Demo­cratic Forum, a coali­tion of inde­pend­ent Belarus­ian civil soci­ety lead­ers, experts and act­iv­ists oper­at­ing in exile, has sub­mit­ted five pro­pos­als to Pres­id­ent Trump and to the lead­ers of Ukraine, the UK and the EU that must be included in any peace agree­ment if we are to achieve that end.


Firstly, there must be bind­ing guar­an­tees of Belarus’s sov­er­eignty and ter­rit­orial integ­rity, equi­val­ent to those offered to Ukraine. Without such guar­an­tees, Belarus remains vul­ner­able not only as a mil­it­ary plat­form but also as a state. After Ukraine, the Krem­lin will likely seek oppor­tun­it­ies to com­pensate for its fail­ures. Rus­sia is fully cap­able of pur­su­ing a scen­ario involving the com­plete annex­a­tion of Belarus. This would instantly shift Rus­sia’s mil­it­ary infra­struc­ture hun­dreds of kilo­metres west­ward, dir­ectly to the bor­ders of Poland, Lithuania and Latvia, rad­ic­ally destabil­ising Nato’s east­ern flank and mak­ing a large-scale war in Europe far more likely.


Today, Belarus alone holds more than 1,300 offi­cially recog­nised polit­ical pris­on­ers, and more than 500,000 people have fled the coun­try. That brings us to the second of our demands: a com­plete ban on using Belarus as a Rus­sian plat­form for for­eign aggres­sion, and the res­tor­a­tion of Belarus’s per­man­ent non-nuc­lear status. At the end of the Soviet era, the Belarus­ian Mil­it­ary Dis­trict was a stra­tegic launch­pad for the Soviet Union in case of a major con­flict. It can never become so again.


Thirdly, within 30 days of sign­ing the agree­ment, all polit­ic­ally motiv­ated cases in Rus­sia, Ukraine and Belarus must be closed, polit­ical pris­on­ers released, and cit­izens guar­an­teed safe and free return. Today, Belarus alone holds more than 1,300 offi­cially recog­nised polit­ical pris­on­ers, and more than 500,000 people have fled the coun­try. Nobel laur­eates have also called for this in an open let­ter to the pres­id­ents of the US, Rus­sia and Ukraine, and to EU lead­ers, urging the inclu­sion of a pro­vi­sion for the par­don or exchange of civil­ians recog­nised as polit­ical pris­on­ers. Thanks to the per­sonal inter­ven­tion of Pres­id­ent Trump, more than 100 people were released for the first time in many months, and we expect this pro­cess to con­tinue.


Fourthly, there must be free and fair elec­tions in Belarus within 250 days, mon­itored by the Organ­isa­tion for Secur­ity and Cooper­a­tion in Europe, the only inter­na­tion­ally recog­nised struc­ture cap­able of provid­ing legit­im­ate elect­oral mon­it­or­ing in post-author­it­arian trans­itions.


Lastly, sanc­tions relief for Belarus should be gradual and strictly con­di­tioned on the release of all polit­ical pris­on­ers, the ces­sa­tion of polit­ical repres­sion, and the hold­ing of free and fair elec­tions.


These pro­pos­als are designed to pre­vent a repeat of the 2022 inva­sion of Ukraine and avoid a wider war in Europe. The 1994 Bud­apest Memor­andum, which guar­an­teed the secur­ity of Ukraine, Belarus and Kaza­kh­stan in exchange for giv­ing up nuc­lear weapons, did not require rat­i­fic­a­tion by the par­lia­ments of the guar­antor states. The res­ult was a doc­u­ment that looked reas­sur­ing but proved leg­ally weak – unable to pro­tect Ukraine when it mattered most.


Any mod­ern peace agree­ment must there­fore undergo full par­lia­ment­ary rat­i­fic­a­tion in accord­ance with the internal pro­ced­ures of the sig­nat­ory states. Without these found­a­tions, peace will once again rest on the same fra­gile ground that pre­vi­ously failed Ukraine. Without Belarus, last­ing peace is impossible. Belarus must be part of the agree­ment, bound by oblig­a­tions and pro­tec­ted by strong secur­ity guar­an­tees.


Europe can­not claim to be secure while leav­ing on its map a ter­rit­ory that the Krem­lin could use for annex­a­tion and future attacks on neigh­bour­ing states. A stable future is only pos­sible when this loop­hole is decis­ively closed.


Dr. Valery Tsep­kalo is a former ambas­sador to Wash­ing­ton and a pres­id­en­tial can­did­ate in Belarus in 2020. Dmitry Bolkun­ets is a polit­ical com­ment­ator and sec­ret­ary gen­eral of the Belarus Demo­cratic Forum

ON ISSUES

The End of BRICS

The End of BRICS

Why the ICC No Longer Matters?

Why the ICC No Longer Matters?

“Truth Against Lies”

“Truth Against Lies”

Revival or Degeneration

Revival or Degeneration