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Developing China-Belarus
Relations
Frederick W.
Stakelbeck, Jr.
Europe’s New Red
Scare?
Belarus, a country
contaminated by the disastrous 1986 Chernobyl nuclear
power plant accident, continues to be systematically
poisoned by an oppressive government led by strongman
Alexander Lukashenka. Visiting Vilnius, Lithuania in
April to attend a NATO foreign ministers conference,
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice noted
Washington’s growing frustration with Lukashenka’s
anti-democracy stance by saying, “Belarus is really the
last dictatorship in the center of Europe,
and its time for a change.”
But with concern
mounting in the West regarding the Lukashenka
government, far too little attention has been given to
another area of immediate concern, namely, Belarus’
growing bilateral ties with China. Public statements
coming out of Minsk make it clear that the Lukashenka
government has identified China, along with steady ally
Russia, as a key player in its foreign policy strategy
moving forward.
Like Russia, China
could become the perfect collaborator for Belarus,
offering the country an array of attractive economic and
military incentives to sustain what has become Europe’s
harshest regime. But what does
Belarus offer China?
Moreover, why would China seek an economic and military
alliance with a European country of minimal size and
influence?
A History of
Bilateral Cooperation
In an interview with
Chinese daily Xinhua in May, Belarus Foreign
Minister Sergei Martynov noted, “Promoting relations
with China
is a diplomatic priority.” Since first establishing
relations in 1992, both countries have gone to great
lengths to increase bilateral cooperation and have
demonstrated an increasing willingness to support each
other in various international forums concerning issues
of mutual interest and importance.
In April 2001,
President Alexander Lukashenka openly supported China in
the plane collision incident involving the U.S.,
extending his personal condolences to the families of
the deceased Chinese pilot saying, “We stand on China’s
side, as China made no mistake in the incident. A
flourishing and rapidly developing great nation is
standing up to the world. That’s China.”
In September 2003, a
delegation from China that included General Chan Shutian,
deputy head of the army’s political department, visited
Belarus to exchange expertise in the “sphere of military
discipline” which allegedly included counter-terrorist
cooperation.
Recent contact
between the two countries has become intense, focused
primarily on the improvement of military and
intelligence synergies.
In April, Belarus and
China signed a joint “Declaration for the 21st
Century” document agreeing to cooperate in the fields of
trade, economy, science, technology, military affairs
and culture. In May, Wu Guansheng, a member of the
Communist Party of China (CPC), met with Tozik Anatoly
Afanasievich, president of the State Control Commission
of Belarus, to discuss the exchange of ideas concerning
the “supervision of government.”
Also in May, Chinese
Defense Minister Cao Gangchuan met with Belarus Defense
Minister Leonid Semeonovich Maltsev. During their
meeting, Gangchuan stated that his country’s armed
forces were ready for increased cooperation with the
Belarus army. Masltsev concurred, noting that Belarus
was also looking to deepen the current military
relationship.
Visiting Beijing in
early June, Maltsev announced both countries had signed
documents agreeing to allow Chinese military personnel
to train in Minsk, while joint projects on munitions and
military hardware were also signed.
Why Belarus?
Over the past decade,
China
has taken deliberate steps to advance relations with
countries possessing both the natural resources to
propel its economy and the global influence to support
its ascension in the international community. For
example, energy contracts with
Iran, Sudan and
Venezuela; mineral and oil sands extraction contracts
with U.S. neighbor Canada; intelligence and military
cooperation with Cuba; seaport agreements with Panama
and mining contracts with South Africa have all
furthered China’s regional and global strategic goals.
Each of these
countries has provided China with a tangible, long-term
strategic asset. However, this is not the case with
Belarus which makes China’s pursuit of the small country
unusual.
Belarus is not an
economic, energy or military giant. With a service-based
economy generating revenues that reached a paltry $3.3
billion in 2004, the country relies heavily on imports
from neighboring countries such as Russia, Germany,
Poland and the Ukraine. President Lukashenka’s “Market
Socialism” which was first launched in 1995 has had
mixed results. High inflation, meager foreign investment
and a significant trade deficit of $600 million have all
combined to hinder the country’s economic growth. Even
the country’s defense budget, at $176 million or 1.4% of
GDP in 2002, is miniscule when compared to other
countries in the region.
Belarus’ attempts at
privatization and other market reforms have been
painstakingly slow and extremely burdensome for
businesses, with well over 80 percent of all industry
still under state control. As in the Cold War, Belarus
continues to depend on Russian subsidies for its
survival. Making China’s pursuit even more intriguing is
the fact that Belarus is a net importer of oil – most of
which comes from energy-rich
Russia.
What Belarus Does
Offer China
Belarus does possess
one important asset that China desperately seeks - a
location in the heart of
Europe.
With a boarder that includes Russia on the east, Ukraine
in the south, Poland in the west, Lithuania in the
northwest, and Latvia in the north, Belarus offers China
the perfect European incubator for government sponsored
activities that include spying, espionage and
intelligence gathering.
In essence, Belarus
could become a “virtual beehive” of Chinese sponsored
covert activity. Such activities are already hallmarks
of Chinese foreign policy in countries such as
Australia, Canada, Germany and the U.S. With Belarus as
a strong European ally in an undeclared war against U.S.
global influence, covert activities could take hold
across continental Europe, eventually giving China
access to confidential information and technology
necessary to modernize many of its more clandestine
domestic industries.
If permitted to take
root, this would immediately compromise the already
fragile U.S. backed arms embargo against China, placing
Europe’s
fledgling democracies and U.S. national security in
almost certain jeopardy.
Russian Concerns
For its part, Russia
enjoys certain economic, geopolitical and security
benefits from its relationship with Belarus. In the
past, the country has used Belarusian territory to
deploy early-warning missile stations and has enjoyed
the use of bases in Belarus. By effectively giving
Russia a defense against possible future NATO
enlargement, the geostrategic importance of a
cooperative and obedient Belarus is enormous. In effect,
Belarus neutralizes Western democratic influences on
Russia’s western boarders.
But is Russia willing
to share Belarus with China, seeing U.S. global hegemony
as a greater threat than Chinese economic and
ideological expansionism?
The answer to this
question is simple - Moscow will not permit China to
compromise its long relationship with Belarus. Russia
has a natural suspicion of China and its intentions in
the West. Any explicit affability between Belarus and
China would only support Moscow’s misgivings.
United States
Concerns
Speaking at a
Singapore conference organized by the London-based
International Institute of Strategic Studies last month,
U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld openly questioned
China’s continued military buildup, “Since no nation
threatens China, one must wonder: Why this growing
investment? Why these continuing arms purchases?”
Perhaps it is time to
pose the same question to China concerning its relations
with Belarus. Why the growing investment in military
relations? Why the interest in holding joint military
training exercises? To get an honest answer regarding
these questions, Washington must be willing to ask tough
questions and be prepared to receive uncomfortable
answers. In the past, President Bush has called China an
“espionage threat” and a “competitor, not a strategic
partner.” China’s global covert actions and bilateral
military arrangements throughout the world prove the
President’s comments are indeed true.
Conclusion
China is fully
committed to the development of strategic assets and
governmental relations with countries located at key
points throughout the world in order to accumulate power
and influence. With its power and influence growing in
places like Panama, Cuba, Sudan, Venezuela and Canada,
China is positioning itself against the U.S. Belarus is
just another strategic piece in the puzzle.
If the Belarus-China
bilateral relationship is permitted to flourish and
mature, it could seriously threaten U.S. sponsored
efforts at global democratization. Even worse, it could
mark the implementation of a larger plan by Beijing to
destabilize and fracture the European community.
In short, Belarus is
not a typical Chinese ally. For that reason, Western
analysts should closely monitor this developing
relationship.
July 18, 2005
Frederick W.
Stakelbeck, Jr. is a freelance writer based in
Philadelphia.
Updated 7/18/05
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