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Interview: Belarus leader in exile on ‘defending our common values’

Vladimir Putin has just made Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya’s job feel even more urgent.

Over the weekend, the Russian president declared that he was preparing to position tactical nuclear weapons in neighboring Belarus by July 1, a move seemingly designed to shake the West’s commitment to Ukraine.

Why We Wrote This

With a plan to position tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, Russia’s Vladimir Putin appears to be capitalizing on close ties between the two nations. Yet the exiled leader of Belarus’ pro-democracy movement points to a different view of her nation’s people and their future.

Ms. Tsikhanouskaya, the exiled leader of Belarus’ pro-democracy movement, has spent much of the past week in Washington, meeting with members of Congress, top Biden administration officials, and members of the Belarusian diaspora.

The goal: to publicize what she calls the “oppressions” of Belarusian strongman Alexander Lukashenko and, by extension, his patron in Moscow, President Putin. 

“For the Belarusian people, … Russia stands for war and poverty, and Europe stands for peace and stability and prosperity,” she said in a Monitor interview Saturday at a Washington hotel.

The White House said it would “monitor the implications” of Mr. Putin’s announcement but sees no sign of imminent risk. Mr. Putin has threatened the use of short-range nuclear weapons in Ukraine before, and he seems to do so when the war in Ukraine is going badly.

In her Monitor interview, Ms. Tsikhanouskaya also spoke of her imprisoned husband and her parents, still living in Belarus, and her children in Lithuania.

Vladimir Putin has just made Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya’s job feel even more urgent.

Over the weekend, the Russian president declared that he was preparing to position tactical nuclear weapons in neighboring Belarus by July 1, a move seemingly designed to shake the West’s commitment to Ukraine.

Ms. Tsikhanouskaya, the exiled leader of Belarus’ pro-democracy movement, has spent much of the past week in Washington, meeting with members of Congress, top Biden administration officials, and members of the Belarusian diaspora.

Why We Wrote This

With a plan to position tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, Russia’s Vladimir Putin appears to be capitalizing on close ties between the two nations. Yet the exiled leader of Belarus’ pro-democracy movement points to a different view of her nation’s people and their future.

The goal: to publicize what she calls the “oppressions” of Belarusian strongman Alexander Lukashenko and his “cronies,” and by extension his patron in Moscow, President Putin. The Russian leader’s announcement Saturday of preparations for short-range nuclear weaponry in Belarus – which also borders on Ukraine – underscores the high-stakes nature of the war, including for Ukraine’s neighbors.

“For the Belarusian people, … Russia stands for war and poverty, and Europe stands for peace and stability and prosperity,” Ms. Tsikhanouskaya said in a Monitor interview Saturday at a Washington hotel. “We have already chosen our direction.”

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