Would Lukashenko accept someone else doing politics in his country, where he is the main dictator? I don’t think so
Pavel Slunkin comments on Lukashenko´s relation with Moscow after Wagner mutiny
Would Lukashenko accept someone else doing politics in his country, where he is the main dictator? I don’t think so
Pavel Slunkin comments on Lukashenko´s relation with Moscow after Wagner mutiny
Lukashenko prefers to have men he can control: I’m not sure he can trust mercenaries
Pavel Slunkin on Wagner’s arrival in Belarus
If Prigozhin will not have Wagner troops, if they will take Wagner troops from him, this will probably mean he is out of the game
Pavel Slunkin comments on the Wagner rebellion in Russia and wonders about its future impact on Prigozhin
In this interview Pavel Slunkin talks about the recent development in Russia and Belarus concerning the Wagner rebellion
For Lukashenko, a destabilization of Russia or Putin is an existential threat because his power is guaranteed by Moscow
Pavel Slunkin comments on relations between Lukashenko and Moscow in the context of Wagner mutiny
The years I was in the foreign ministry were the most liberal ever, and we were lobbying for a pro-Western direction
Pavel Slunkin on Lukashenko´s politics in Belarus and his role in the context of the Wagner mutiny
In the most dangerous moment in Putin’s biography, Lukashenko was there to help and to serve his boss in Moscow
Pavel Slunkin comments on Lukashenko’s role as mediator in the context of the Wagner rebellion
Putin lost because he showed how weak his system is, that he can be challenged so easily
Pavel Slunkin comments on Wagner rebellion in Russia
[Lukashenko] may have saved Putin from civil war. At the very least, he has pleased him
Pavel Slunkin analyses Lukashenko’s role as mediator in the Prigozhin affair
The Russian security services, omnipresent in [Belarus], could get rid of [Prigozhin] if Putin so decides
Pavel Slunkin on Prigozhin’s move to Belarus