Russia Monitor Monthly September 2020

Page 14

T

he Belarusian Foreign Ministry said on Monday that a group of 1,000 Russian servicemen would be sent to Belarus for Slavic Brotherhood’s second stage (September 22–25). As a whole, the second part is set to attract far more troops than in the first part, as agreed on long before. A group of 6,000 troops was drawn to the military drills, alongside some 500 units of military equipment, with roughly 1,000 servicemen and 100 pieces of hardware dispatched from Russia. Not only were the drills extended in time, but also their whole scale rose dramatically. What both Russia and Belarus was of course that these were just defense drills aimed at “developing a set of actions accordingly to any deals between Russia and Belarus and deepening integration

process to strengthen the Union State and its defense capabilities.” It was believed to employ 800 people and 170 pieces of military hardware, with Belarus preparing some 500 troops and some 100 units of military equipment as well as 300 servicemen from Russia along with 70 pieces of military hardware. Moreover, Russia would have mobilized paratroopers from its Pskov division to Belarus for the joint drills. Also, Moscow deployed a battalion tactical group from the Tula-based 106th Guards Airborne Division to Belarus. The second stage will involve troops from Russia’s Western Operational Command, special forces, air and anti-aircraft defense troops, missile and artillery brigades from Belarus, and airborne detachments from Russia.

24 September 2020

RUSSIAN LIFELINE DOES LITTLE FOR BELARUS Belarus plunged into political and economic turmoil. Thus the Kremlin offered a lifeline to Alexander Lukashenko, with an emergency $1.5 billion loan to help the country avoid a crash in living standards. But this lifeline is not an answer to Minsk’s headache since the new loan will largely go towards refinancing debt already owed to Russia.

B

elarus will channel the lion’s share of its new loan from Russia to cover the outstanding debt to Russian gas giant Gazprom. Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said the $1.5 billion loan - as agreed during a Sochi meeting between Lukashenko and Putin - would come in a few tranches. Russia and the Eurasian Fund for Stabilization and Development will send Belarus the first $1 billion tranche by the end of the year. The remainder will be paid in 2021. Belarus will take about $330 million of its loan from the Eurasian Fund for

14

Stabilization and Development to fully cover its debt to Gazprom, according to Siluanov. This involves Lukashenko’s gas concession towards Moscow. Minsk buys as much as 20 billion cubic meters (bcm) of Russian-sourced gas each year. Officials in both countries are haggling over gas prices. Gas trades at $127 per 1,000 cubic meters whilst Lukashenko had earlier argued this should be no more than $45. Gazprom is keen to discuss gas prices in 2021 yet only after Belarus pays off the debt to Gazprom, the company’s CEO Alexei Miller said back in May.

www.warsawinstitute.org


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.