16 November 2025, Sunday, 8:49
Support
the website
Sim Sim,
Charter 97!
Categories

"Let's Look At The Fate Of Lukashenko's Friends"

1
"Let's Look At The Fate Of Lukashenko's Friends"

The dictator is afraid the Tomahawks will hit the centers of decision-making.

Lukashenko recently said that "he is ready for a big deal with the United States". Why has the dictator suddenly started talking about negotiations?

Let's look at the fate of Lukashenko's friends on Charter97.org talked with Dmitry Bondarenko, coordinator of the "European Belarus" civic campaign:

- Let's look at the fate of Lukashenko's friends. I won't even recall Muammar Gaddafi and Saddam Hussein, dictators who were overthrown and executed. Lukashenko's allies for years were Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas, Bashar al-Assad with his terrorist army, and Russia, which never won the war. Iran and its proxies have been crushingly defeated by Israeli and US strikes

So Lukashenko is afraid that these Tomahawks will indeed be handed over to the AFU while Russian troops are on the territory of Belarus. Where is the guarantee that the strikes will not hit military facilities and decision-making centers - that is, his residences?

There is also the threat of a trade war between the U.S. and China again, and trade sanctions may be imposed against Beijing. What kind of "grand bargain" can we talk about? It's a deal between a bedbug and an elephant. That is why the bedbug Lukashenko (or, to whom it is more familiar, a cockroach) declares his readiness for a "big deal", hoping to preserve his power and life. He expects that if he demonstrates loyalty and compliments the American president, he will avoid the fate of his dictator friends.

We remember how, before the fall of the Assad regime, there was talk that he was "becoming handshakeable," that Europeans and even Americans were ready to meet with him within the framework of realpolitik. It was a distraction - a short time later, the Assad regime collapsed in just two weeks.

Lukashenko thinks, "If I praise Trump, I won't get hit too hard." That's what his "grand bargain" is all about. Of course, he expects to reap some economic benefits. Lukashenko has realized that it is too expensive to hold political prisoners. Therefore, he will release them, begging for something for himself.

Write your comment 1

Follow Charter97.org social media accounts