Lukashenko asks Russia for agreement to defend Belarus if attacked

What do the security assurances mean?
A topic previously discussed
Comments from Lukashenko
All agreements need to be revised
Both nations agree that a deeper relationship is needed
“This is the kind of security guarantees we need
Russian troops in Belarus
Belarus currently hosting Russia soldiers
Lukashenko said he won't join in the war
“Weird desires
Comments from Mykhailo Podolyak
Russia is Belarus's only threat
Why ask for a deeper relationship now?
Blaming the West
The US is an aggressor not a security guarantor
Tactical nuclear weapons are coming to Belarus
What do the security assurances mean?

On April 10th, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko asked Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu for security assurance from Moscow and a promise that the Kremlin would defend Belarus in the event the country was attacked. 

A topic previously discussed

First reported on by Belarusian state-owned media, Lukashenko was cited as saying he had previously discussed the topic of defense with Vladimir Putin and noted that it was necessary to formalize some security guarantees according to a Reuters report. 

Comments from Lukashenko

"I raised this question in the negotiations with the President of Russia. He completely supported me,” Lukashenko explained, according to a translation from Ukrainska Pravda. 

All agreements need to be revised

"He said we need to revise all our decrees and agreements—between Belarus and Russia—to see what international normative legal act we must sign now in order to ensure the full security of Belarus,” Lukashenko added. 

Both nations agree that a deeper relationship is needed

According to Lukashenko, during his conversation with Putin, the two came to the conclusion that Belarus needed security guarantees from Russia that it would protect Belarus as if it was its own territory in the event the country was attacked. 

“This is the kind of security guarantees we need"

“This is the kind of security guarantees we need," Lukashenko explained, though it was not clear what kind of attack the Belarusian President was worried about. 

Russian troops in Belarus

Lukashenko also thanked Shoigu and Russia for the thousands of troops that are currently stationed in Belarus, which hosted Russian soldiers over the last year and continues to do so.

Belarus currently hosting Russia soldiers

“Belarus currently hosts a contingent of Russian forces, and also served as a staging ground for Moscow's invasion of Ukraine in the early days of the war,” wrote DW News. 

Lukashenko said he won't join in the war

During his meeting with Shoigu, Lukashenko again reiterated that he had no intention of sending Belarusian troops to fight in Russia’s war with Ukraine, but did add that if his country was attacked he would respond according to DW News. 

“Weird desires"

The Head of Ukraine’s Office of the President Mykhailo Podolyak called Lukashenko’s remarks “weird desires that require no longer political analysis” in a tweet after the details of the meeting were reported. 

Comments from Mykhailo Podolyak

"Hard to imagine an antelope asking for security guarantees in the crocodile's mouth,” Podolyak wrote, in a sarcastically charged message to his audience. 

Russia is Belarus's only threat

“The only existential threat to [Belarus] is [Russia] openly declaring the country's absorption & endangering [the Belarusian] people with nuclear antics, " Podolyak added. 

Why ask for a deeper relationship now?

According to an analysis from Ukrainska Pravda, Lukashenko’s desire to seek a deeper security partnership with Russia stems from his perceived notion that Western nations violated their promises to guarantee the security of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine. 

Blaming the West

In 1994, the United States along with France, China, Russia, and the United Kingdom guaranteed the safety of the three post-Soviet states in exchange for giving up their nuclear weapons at the Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances.

Photo by William J. Clinton Presidential Library Wiki Commons

The US is an aggressor not a security guarantor

"What security guarantees can the US even provide us with? None. What they do is initiate aggression against us, as we can see now,” Lukashenko said during his meeting with Shoigu. “We need full security guarantees from our brotherly Russia.”

Tactical nuclear weapons are coming to Belarus

Vladimir Putin recently announced plans to deploy tactical nuclear weapons on Belarusian territory, which may be why Lukashenko is seeking to deepen his security relationship with Russia as the two states move closer toward political integration. 

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