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Power struggle in Ukraine: what do Yushchenko and Yanukovich
stand for?
By Patrick Richter and Andy Niklaus
1 December 2004
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Neither of the two official factions fighting for power in
Ukrainethe group led by opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko
and that led by the current prime minister, Viktor Yanukovichrepresents
the interests of the broad masses of the population.
Both appeal partly to legitimate interests and needsYushchenko
to the demand for democracy and hostility to a regime characterised
by authoritarian methods, the suppression of media freedom and
the manipulation of elections, and Yanukovich to fear of the devastating
social consequences that would result from the complete opening
of the country to Western capital and the weakening of the traditionally
close relations between Russia and the industrial areas of eastern
Ukraine.
But these appeals are deceitful. They serve to mask the interests
of a narrow elite whose wealth and power stand in glaring contradiction
to the poverty and political exclusion of the broad masses. These
appeals find a resonance because many decades of Stalinist rule
have left an inheritance of confusion and political disorientation
in the working class.
One can get a good idea of the kind of democracy
sought by the Yushchenko camp by looking at Hungary, Poland and
other Eastern European countries where right-wing and ultra-right
parties compete to offer international corporations the best conditions
for the exploitation of the domestic working class. It speaks
volumes about the character of this democratic opposition
that it is supported by organizations such as the US-based National
Endowment for Democracy, which was heavily involved in attempts
to overthrow Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
Yanukovich represents the cliques of oligarchs that have taken
over Ukrainian heavy industry over the past fifteen years. They
have grown enormously wealthy, and are determined to retain the
political power that ensures their continued enrichment.
Both groups, and their respective parliamentary factions, are
more or less openly manipulated and receive support from abroad.
The Western media has reported and decried at length the interference
by Russian President Vladimir Putin in support of Yanukovich.
Putin regards the events in Ukraine as a threat to vital Russian
interests.
Following the Baltic states entry into the European Union
(EU), the stationing of American troops in Central Asia (including
former Soviet republics), and the regime change in Georgia organised
by Washington, Moscow fears it will be isolated should Ukraine
fall under the control of a pro-western government. Russia is
threatened with the loss of influence over one of the most important
industrial regions of the former Soviet Union and the loss of
control over the export routes of its most important raw materials,
oil and gas.
The Western media, on the other hand, has barely commented
on the role of the US and the EU, which have intervened to manipulate
the presidential election in Ukraine in a somewhat less public
manner, but on a greater scale than Russia. Their support for
the opposition ranges from the training of activists, to political
counselling, to the infusion of millions of dollars. They have
openly sided with Yushchenko in the aftermath of the November
21 runoff election, which was won by Yanukovich, according to
election officials controlled by the sitting president, Leonid
Kuchma.
The massive and unrestrained intervention of the Western powers
has aggravated the internal conflict and brought the country to
the brink of civil war.
What forces are at work?
The power struggle in Ukraine has brought to the surface a
conflict that has long been smouldering within the dominant elite.
Yushchenko and his most important supporter, Yulia Tymoshenko,
represent that part of the ruling layer that is determined to
impose a radical opening up of the country to foreign capital.
Between 1993 and 1999, Yushchenko was head of the countrys
central bank. He then served as prime minister for one-and-a-half
years. He led the opposition alliance Our Ukraine,
which had the strongest parliamentary faction following elections
two years ago. Posing as a Western reformer, Yushchenko is seeking
to break up the political-economic clan structures
and ostensibly develop and strengthen democratic institutions.
He wants to lead Ukraine into NATO and the European Union, and
endorses Western-style capitalism.
He is supported by the nationalist Batkywschtschyna Party led
by the millionaire (or, according to some sources, billionaire)
former vice-prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko. The methods by which
she attained her wealth can be compared to those of the worst
of the oligarchs and mafia bosses in the Yanukovich camp. Her
appeals for liberty and democracy against
the Kuchma regime, to which she owes her wealth, are utterly cynical.
Tymoshenko, who is 44, comes from the eastern Ukrainian city
of Dnepropetrovsk. She came to Kiev at the beginning of the 1990s
with her acquaintance Pavel Lasarenko. The two followed Kuchma,
who also originates from Dnepropetrovsk.
In 1996, Lasarenko became prime minister and, along with Tymoshenko,
amassed considerable wealth. Tymoshenko developed a mechanism
for exchanging Russian oil and gas for Ukrainian industrial goods,
under conditions where a substantial share of the proceeds ended
up in the coffers of the company she had personally foundedUnited
Energy Systems.
Lasarenko came into conflict with various oligarchs and was
ditched by Kuchma in 1998, in connection with a corruption scandal.
Lasarenko currently sits in a US prison on charges of money laundering.
Tymoshenko managed to worm her way out of the affair and was appointed
deputy to Prime Minister Yushchenko in 1999.
In its edition of November 26, the Guardian newspaper
of Britain quotes from a book by Matthew Brzezinski, Casino
Moscow, which devotes an entire chapter to Tymoshenko, describing
her as an eleven-billion-dollar-woman. Tymoshenko,
having concentrated 20 per cent of the wealth of the country under
her control while the country as a whole starves, is reportedly
guarded by an entire unit of former Soviet special forces.
She now presents herself as a leader of the democratic opposition,
although in the acquisition of her personal fortune she engaged
in practices no less dirty and bloody than those of her adversaries
in the Yanukovich camp.
Following the break-up of the Soviet Union, a section of the
old Stalinist leadership divided substantial parts of the Ukrainian
economy amongst itself in the course of privatisation, utilizing
criminal methods to accumulate obscene levels of wealth. At the
same time, the country was wracked by growing poverty. The principal
target for the privatisations was Soviet-era industry, concentrated
in the east of Ukraine, which is rich in iron ore and coal deposits.
The area is dominated by mines, engineering facilities, and armaments
plants. These are the economic sectors upon which Kuchma and Yanukovich
rest.
Yanukovich is chairman of the regional party and former governor
of the eastern Ukrainian heavy-industry area centred in Donetsk.
He is the political representative of the Donetsk oligarch clans
led by Rinat Achmetov, who, with an estimated fortune of two billion
dollars, is regarded as the richest man in Ukraine.
Kuchma, who has ruled as president since 1994, was director
of a large arms company in Dnepropetrovsk and a high-ranking KGB
functionary during the Soviet period. Kuchma represents the Dnepropetrovsk
oligarch clans, together with his son-in-law, Viktor Pinchuk,
himself an oligarch and former prime minister.
Economic ties between Ukraine and Russia were extremely close
during the Soviet era, and remained close after the collapse of
the USSR and Ukrainian independence. This is reflected in the
interlocking interests of the various factions of oligarchs. Some
83 per cent of the Ukrainian aluminium industry, for example,
is Russian-owned.
The dependence of Ukraine on Russian oil and gasfour-fifths
of its needs are supplied by Russiaunderlies its close economic
relations with its neighbour to the east. Russia uses this dependence
to maintain its influence over Ukraine. By rationing the flow
of energy, Russia is able to apply considerable pressure.
Russian energy companies such as Lukoil and Gazprom, which
have close links to the Russian state, operate in Ukraine as de
facto branches of the Russian foreign ministry, and the former
Russian prime minister and Gazprom chairman, Victor Chernomyrdin,
has been ambassador to Ukraine since 2001.
Since taking office in 1994, Kuchma has sought to develop an
independent role for Ukraine, attempting to achieve a balance
in relations between Russia, on the one hand, and the US and Europe
on the other. He initiated a drive to lead Ukraine into the European
Union and NATO, striving at the same time to strengthen the economic
influence of the Confederation of Independent States (CIS), the
umbrella body of the various states that emerged from the break-up
of the Soviet Union. The CIS is dominated by Russia.
Ukraine took part in a project, which has since petered out,
to revive the silk roada commercial route between Europe
and Asia that bypasses Russia. Georgia, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan
and Moldavia participated in this project in 1998-99 under the
auspices of the European powers. At the same time, Ukraine under
Kuchma was one of the biggest recipients of American financial
aid.
For his part, the current leader of the opposition, Yushchenko,
was already working closely with Western capitalist interests
in the 1990s. As chairman of the Ukraine central bank, he succeeded
in maintaining relations with Western banks and institutions and
securing further credits during the ruble crisis that rocked Russia
and the other countries of the former Soviet Union in 1998. This
improved his reputation amongst the clans of oligarchs, who hoped
he would help them achieve better relations with the US and Europe.
In December 1999, Yushchenko was appointed prime minister.
However, since the 1999 Kosovo war and the removal of Yugoslav
President Slobodan Milosevic, these interests have been forced
to recognize that US imperialism would not hesitate to continue
its aggressive drive for domination and take them on. Yushchenko
himself threatened to close unprofitable mines and steel plants,
thereby directly threatening the power base of the oligarchs in
the east of Ukraine.
Tymoshenko, then the vice-prime minister and responsible for
energy trade with Russia, came into conflict with the pipeline
baron and son-in-law of Kuchma, Pinchuk. She was removed from
office in January 2001 and remanded, subject to investigations.
Yushchenko was relieved of his office in April of the same year.
Following the Rose Revolution in Georgia, which,
with US support, led to the removal from office of Eduard Shevardnadze
in November 2003, Kuchma once again sought to cuddle up to Moscow.
Further attempts to accommodate Washington, such as the dispatch
of 1,600 soldiers to Iraq, failed to impress the Bush administration.
The US continued with its aggressive strategy and groomed opposition
candidate Yushchenko. He has close relations with Madeline Albright,
the secretary of state in the Democratic Clinton administration,
Zbigniew Brzezinski, the national security advisor under former
president Jimmy Carter, and the financier George Soros. Donations
from institutes established by Soros have helped develop and finance
the Ukrainian student movement Pora (It is Time)
along the lines of similar movements in Serbia and Georgia. Pora
has been in the forefront of the demonstrations in support of
the opposition.
Popular support for the opposition relies partially on hopes
that a change of government can only improve the catastrophic
social situation of the country. Since the dissolution of the
Soviet Union, average monthly income in Ukraine has dropped to
$30. In the cities, it is barely more than $60, and in Kiev, approximately
$100. Spending power plummeted by 40 per cent between 1989 and
1999.
Social and welfare structures and facilitiesstrongly
linked to the factories in Soviet timeshave been devastated.
Life expectancy has sunk to 73 years for women and 62 years for
menafter Russia, the lowest rates in Europe. In the meantime,
the rate of new AIDS victims is one of the highest in the world.
Four million inhabitants have left Ukraine over the past few years,
and deaths of miners are exceeded only by China.
See Also:
US intervenes in disputed
Ukraine election: Who the hell asked you, Mr. Powell?
[30 November 2004]
Great power rivalries erupt
over disputed election in Ukraine
[25 November 2004]
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