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Mark Feygin: Lukashenka Begins To Fuss

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Mark Feygin: Lukashenka Begins To Fuss
MARK FEYGIN

A strike on military facilities in Belarus is a very real scenario.

Russian human rights activist and critic of the Putin regime Mark Feygin commented on the position of dictator Lukashenka in an interview with the Fabrika Novin Ukrainian Youtube Channel.

"I think that Lukashenka's fuss is also connected with the fact that the West is finally determined in relation to his regime. Thus, by the way, a lot follows. Moscow is putting pressure on him (apparently, the pressure has increased)," says Mark Feygin.

"Moscow is indeed not in a brilliant position, and an attack from the north, even if it does not aim to capture Kyiv or reach Lviv and stop the supply of Western weapons from Poland, will at least allow a significant part of the Armed Forces to be diverted to this northern sector in order to provide at least some relative success.

It seems that Lukashenka strongly resists, not only the involvement of his armed forces (it was not by chance that he said at the CSTO: they say we have only 35,000-40,000, they won’t play a big role, no reason to bother us). Lukashenka realized the message for him: dear friend, if your occupied country becomes a springboard from which Russian troops (not even Belarusian ones) move into Ukraine, then you will receive a missile strike.

According to the blogger, the Ukrainian side, through its channels, informed the ruler of Belarus that the retaliatory shelling of Belarusian territory is a completely real scenario, and he is aware of the seriousness of the consequences."

"And note, unlike Russian targets, when the West severely limits Ukraine in terms of strikes, this will not happen with Belarus at all - shoot where you want Minsk or Brest,” Mark Feygin believes. "February-March is one thing, when everything has just begun, chaos, and Ukraine still did not know how to behave, but now - who will have a self-reflection, after everything that happened, after more than nine months?

Therefore, it seems to me that Lukashenka was fussing and repeating at the CSTO meeting that: we should all work together, we are friends. And I saw that this was not the case: the final statement was not accepted because of Pashinyan, and Kazakhstan does not need it.

Tokayev was re-elected, and now he is 100% actively negotiating how to "merge" with Beijing, and with Washington, and with London, and with Ankara.

Lukashenka understands that he is the same outcast as Putin, unlike all other leaders of the CSTO member states, the so-called union state and all these bodies. And he is afraid to find himself alone with Putin.”

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