Shavkat Mirziyoyev, Uzbekistan's president, began a two-day official visit to Belarus on July 7 at the invitation of Alexander Lukashenko, in the latest sign of Minsk's push to broaden its economic and diplomatic ties beyond Moscow.
Talks in the Belarusian capital on July 8–9 will focus on expanding what Tashkent describes as a multifaceted partnership, according to the Uzbek presidential press service as reported by Kun.uz. The agenda centres on lifting bilateral trade and deepening co-operation across agriculture, mechanical engineering, pharmaceuticals, textiles and the food sector, alongside cultural and humanitarian exchanges.
A substantial package of agreements covering priority areas is expected to be signed at the close of the summit. The official talks will be preceded by the third Uzbekistan–Belarus Interregional Forum in Minsk, gathering regional delegations and business representatives from both countries.
The visit carries weight beyond its workmanlike agenda. For Lukashenko, it extends a run of intensive diplomacy that has taken in closed-door talks with Vladimir Putin at Valdai, a warmly choreographed reception by Xi Jinping in Beijing, and stops in Myanmar and Indonesia - a flurry of engagement that followed, and appeared designed to offset, last month's confrontation with Kyiv over Russian drone-relay equipment on Belarusian territory. Hosting a Central Asian head of state days after declaring that Belarus "does not need war" allows Minsk to present itself as a functioning diplomatic actor rather than an isolated appendage of Moscow.
For Tashkent, the calculus is commercial and deliberately non-aligned. Mirziyoyev has pursued an omnidirectional foreign policy as the Minsk trip follows the signing of a strategic partnership declaration with Georgia last week and a meeting with a senior BlackRock executive on July 6, and Uzbekistan has been careful to deepen ties across the post-Soviet space without endorsing Russia's war in Ukraine.
Belarus, sanctioned by the west but hungry for markets and machinery buyers, offers Uzbek exporters openings in precisely the mid-tier industrial sectors on this week's agenda.
The test of the visit will be less the volume of documents signed as such packages are a staple of post-Soviet summitry, than whether the interregional forum translates into trade flows that give Minsk genuine alternatives to its deepening dependence on the Russian market, to which its fuel exports hit a record high last month.
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