Dudzinski: They Call Lukashenka To Bunker All The Time
- 1.10.2024, 9:23
How did the Belarusian dictator anger the Kremlin?
Blogger and showman Dzianis Dudzinski, who more than once visited the war as a reporter, told Salidarnasc how Lukashenka infuriated Putin:
— Lukashenka understands: as soon as the first Belarusian soldier crosses the border with Ukraine — all this international avalanche (not even military, but diplomatic) — Belarus will be crossed out with a big red cross.
Now Putin demands, Lukashenka refuses. He is trying to buy off a million eggs and "repair" Russian soldiers wounded in Ukraine. He resists as hard as he can.
However. Belarus is a member of the UN, and is obliged to sign and agree with all conventions and decisions of the organization. One of the conventions defines an aggressor as a country that provides its territory to another country for an attack on a third country.
— And who has this prevented over the past 2.5 years?
— According to official UN documents, Belarus is an aggressor (not a coaggressor!) And it would be much more honest if Lukashenka came out and said: "Yes, we are aggressors in this war. Throw tomatoes at us.”
But no, he is restless. At the same time, it can be seen that relations between Russia and Belarus today are well, a very tense string, Shaheds are all these...
— It seemed clear who was sending the Shaheds to Belarus, but the state propaganda turned the arrows to Ukraine...
— Three points, and what is important, they are not mutually exclusive. It happens that the Shahed flies by accident, both from the territory of Russia and from Ukraine. But the Ukrainian military told me that if you turn on the electronic warfare systems that are on their northern border, then Russian drones will immediately fall on the territory of Ukraine. But why do Ukrainians need it?
I apologize for such a comparison, but as the Ukrainians told me, "Belarus is like a dump for Shaheds: we just redirect them there. Let them fly there, and the Belarusians raise their fighters and figure it out for themselves."
And the third, important point. Lukashenka began to flirt with the Armed Forces of Ukraine: they say, we will withdraw our troops from the border, and you, too. He allows taking liberties behind Putin's back.
And one more thing, which, as I understood, infuriated Putin. When the exercises of Belarusians with Chinese special forces were held in the Brest region. China, of course, either paid money or paid for a couple of tons of potash fertilizers. And for Lukashenka, this is a propaganda move: they say, look, we are in the same trench with China, we are a world power. Cardinal and haberdasher!
But today China is the master of Russia, and Russia is the master of Belarus.
And suddenly the lower rank called Lukashenka is negotiating some kind of military action with China over Putin's head! “Are you crazy, Mr. Comrade Lukashenka?”
And after these two events — separate negotiations with Ukraine and training with Chinese special forces — Putin no longer has the patience. And on the carpet, on the carpet, on the carpet — they can't communicate via phone. More precisely, into the bunker.
It is clear that Putin is always demanding something from Lukashenka. Perhaps he feels that the khan, the big, big khan, is gradually approaching the Russian economy, and the Belarusian economy will catch up with it. They understand that they are now in the same boat. And it is not clear who will jump out and who will drown a little later. Because there is no longer a hole in the boat, but many holes, and water is already pouring into them.