Valery Kavaleuski was born in the village of Bieražnoje in the Palesse area in southern Belarus in 1976 and graduated from the Berazhnoe Secondary School in 1993.[citation needed]
From 2001 to 2004, Kavaleuski was seconded to the Belarusian embassy in the United States as first secretary to work on political issues.[1] In 2002, he briefly served as the chargé d'affaires of Belarus in the US. Kavaleuski resigned from diplomatic service during the Jeans Revolution,[citation needed] when Lukashenko remained in power for a third term after the disputed 2006 Belarusian presidential election.
Before joining Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya's team in December 2020, Kavaleuski worked in the World Bank Group in Washington, DC.[4] Before then, Kavaleuski was an international journalist at Voice of America.[7]
On 16 September 2014, Kavaleuski participated in a protest in Washington, D.C. near the Belarusian embassy, calling for information about Viktar Hanchar and Anatol Krasouski, who were forcefully disappeared in 1999 in Minsk.[10]
In 2015, Kavaleuski argued that the Russian–Belarusian agreement for Russia to establish an airbase in Belarus was a violation of the Belarusian Constitution, was against the wishes of Belarusians, and placed Belarus into the "line of conflict" between Russia and the West, at a time when Russia had "become fully committed to a dangerous geopolitical agenda undermining international security".[8]
Kavaleuski was appointed to the Belarusian United Transitional Cabinet, a government-in-exile, on 9 August 2022.[3] In October, Kavaleuski and Tsikhanouskaya started negotiating an alliance with the Ukrainian government against the possibility of Russia taking full control of Belarus.[12]
On 26 June 2024, Kavaleuski resigned from the UTC. He referred to differences on strategic approaches and tactical matters among his reasons for resigning.[13]
In November 2021, Kavaleuski described the Belarusian situation, stating, "What's happening in Belarus, it's like black and white. People want democracy and freedom, and there is no geopolitical undertone."[1]