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[Pardon the source and the editorializing]

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
28 March 2002
 
UKRAINIAN ELECTION AS STRATEGIC 'FOOTBALL' 
By Jan Maksymiuk 

-Yushchenko's Our Ukraine, along with the vociferously
antipresidential Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc and Socialist
Party, has been accused of preparing a U.S.-sponsored
"Yugoslav-scenario" coup in Ukraine. According to this
sinister plan, the opposition is allegedly going to
declare the official results of the 31 March election
falsified and create a separate parliament based on an
alternative vote calculation. An important role in
this plan is to be allegedly played by U.S.-trained
sociologists from the Razumkov Center of Political and
Economic Studies.



President Leonid Kuchma on 22 March termed
"unprecedented" the 20 March resolution by the U.S.
House of Representatives urging the government of
Ukraine to ensure a democratic, transparent, and fair
parliamentary election on 31 March. "Are we a nation,
or are we a football playing field for strategic
partners?" Kuchma asked indignantly.

Last week, Russian Ambassador to Ukraine Viktor
Chernomyrdin was quoted as saying that Russia is with
those parties and election blocs in Ukraine that call
for the development and deepening of relations between
the two countries. He suggested that some constituent
forces of Viktor Yushchenko's Our Ukraine bloc do not
pursue such a goal, adding that this "cannot but worry
us."

Other Russian officials and politicians were not so
elusive about Moscow's political preferences in the
Ukrainian ballot. Russian presidential administration
chief Aleksandr Voloshin said that For a United
Ukraine, the Social Democratic Party (United) of
Ukraine, and the Communist Party of Ukraine are the
forces that promote strengthening Russian-Ukrainian
relations. "Unfortunately, [Our Ukraine] includes
political forces that have overtly anti-Russian
positions," he added. And Dmitrii Rogozin, the head of
the Russian State Duma's International Relations
Committee, noted that if "nationalist forces" win the
upcoming parliamentary election in Ukraine, Moscow and
Kyiv may face problems in bilateral relations.

U.S. officials are extremely reserved about openly
declaring with whom their political sympathies are in
Ukraine, but it is no secret to anyone that Washington
would like to see the pro-Western and pro-reform
Yushchenko emerge as the winner of the 31 March vote.
This position is widely shared in Europe. While not
seeing Ukraine as ready for integration with Europe
right now, European politicians seek to make the
country a friendly buffer zone separating the
expanding NATO and EU from Russia. "Ukraine has a
European history, European life, and European
civilization," OSCE Parliamentary Assembly head Adrian
Severin asserted in Kyiv earlier this month. But many
in Ukraine, among both the electorate and politicians,
have remained unimpressed.

Despite the fact that as many as 33 parties and blocs
are vying for mandates in the 450-seat Verkhovna Rada,
the current election seems to have polarized the
Ukrainian electorate into two camps -- one of the
"Western option" (supporters of Our Ukraine) and the
other of the "pro-Russian option" (supporters of For a
United Ukraine, the Communist Party, and the Social
Democratic Party) -- to a much greater extent than any
previous election campaign in the country. Polls by
several independent polling centers concurrently
suggested over the past few months that Our Ukraine
may obtain up to 50 percent of the vote in western
Ukraine and definitely less than 10 percent in eastern
Ukraine, while the pro-government For a United Ukraine
and the Communists may count on substantial support
primarily in eastern and southern regions.

Confronted with the unpleasantly high popularity of
Yushchenko's Our Ukraine among voters in western
Ukraine, For a United Ukraine campaign planners have
resolved to mobilize as yet undecided voters by
appealing to anti-U.S. sentiments in the country.
Yushchenko's Our Ukraine, along with the vociferously
antipresidential Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc and Socialist
Party, has been accused of preparing a U.S.-sponsored
"Yugoslav-scenario" coup in Ukraine. According to this
sinister plan, the opposition is allegedly going to
declare the official results of the 31 March election
falsified and create a separate parliament based on an
alternative vote calculation. An important role in
this plan is to be allegedly played by U.S.-trained
sociologists from the Razumkov Center of Political and
Economic Studies.

Moreover, a documentary broadcast three times by ICTV
Television and 1+1 Television this month unambiguously
suggested that Ukraine's infamous tape scandal --
which implicates Kuchma and other top officials in the
murder of independent journalist Heorhiy Gongadze --
was used by Washington to exert pressure on Kuchma in
order to depose him and install Yushchenko. For many
observers of Ukrainian politics, the documentary was
primarily intended to sow distrust in Yushchenko by
suggesting to Ukrainians that he is plotting behind
the scenes with Americans to the detriment of his
native country.

To polarize voters even more, Communist lawmakers
questioned the legality of the registration in 1992 of
the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Kyiv Patriarchate) and
accused it of appropriating property from the
canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow
Patriarchate). It is hardly possible to imagine a more
improbable defender of "canonical Orthodoxy" than the
Communist Party, but this issue was publicized by the
Ukrainian Communists on purpose. The Communists know
that the faithful under the Kyiv Patriarchate are more
likely to support pro-Western Yushchenko in the
election, so they have tried to curry favor with those
under the Moscow Patriarchate in order to win their
votes or at least to inflame the religious antagonism
and deepen Ukraine's "west-east split" for the
duration of the election campaign.

It is no wonder that Ukrainian voters, bombarded with
these "strategic football" issues in the
state-controlled media and a cacophony of accusations
and counteraccusations of foul play, are actually not
paying much attention to what the competing parties
and blocs propose in socioeconomic portions of their
election programs. Our Ukraine -- with a moderately
reformist economic program --may eventually obtain
some 100 seats in the Verkhovna Rada as many polls
have predicted, but it seems that the pro-presidential
For a United Ukraine -- by using administrative
levers, intimidation of voters, and massive
advertising in the media -- will get no fewer. And
this will almost certainly mean that a new government
will be very similar to the one Ukraine has at
present.

The current election campaign is not an exception to
the string of election campaigns that independent
Ukraine has already faced: stakes are very high and
the play is habitually foul, but when it comes to
summing up postelection gains and losses, it turns out
that the preservation of the status quo is the only
unquestionable consequence of all the preceding
political commotion. The best prospect for Ukraine
after 31 March would be to see a parliament that could
prevent Kuchma from amending the constitution and
staying in his office for a third term. What Ukraine
primarily and urgently needs is to embrace a positive
and efficient economic program, not a civilizational
or geostrategic choice between the West and the East,
or between Washington and Moscow. This is what all
Ukrainians, including those from "nationalist" Galicia
and "socialist" Donbas, would apparently accept
without reservations and animosities. Unfortunately,
Ukraine's political elites are still incapable of
offering and/or agreeing on such a program. 


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