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Yushchenko and Yanukovych Forge an Electoral Alliance

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  • Yushchenko and Yanukovych Forge an Electoral Alliance

    Jamestown Foundation
    Jan 6 2010

    Yushchenko and Yanukovych Forge an Electoral Alliance

    Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 7 Issue: 2
    January 5, 2010 04:51 PM
    By: Taras Kuzio


    On December 25, 2009 UNIAN published a secret agreement `On Political
    Reconciliation and the Development of Ukraine' leaked by Yaroslav
    Kozachok, the deputy head of the presidential secretariat's department
    on domestic affairs and regional development. Kozachok resigned in
    protest at the secret agreement between President Viktor Yushchenko
    and Party of Regions leader Viktor Yanukovych to appoint the former as
    Prime Minister in the event of Yanukovych's election.

    The Yushchenko and Yanukovych campaigns `not surprisingly` alleged
    that the document was a forgery (Ukrayinska Pravda, December 28). At
    the same time, its authenticity is proven by two steps undertaken by
    the presidential secretariat. Firstly, the presidential secretariat's
    pressure on television channels not to discuss the document, which led
    to Kozachok complaining about the return of censorship to Ukrainian
    media. `It is obvious that ignoring (the document) has taken place on
    instructions from `above,' and the system has worked to block the
    appearance in the mass media of information unpleasant for senior
    officials' (Ukrayinska Pravda, December 29).

    This would not be the first occasion when direct intervention halted
    revelations about a secret electoral alliance between
    Yushchenko-Yanukovych. In December the Security Service (SBU) was
    instructed by the president to investigate the appearance of large
    billboards throughout Kyiv and other cities that had reproduced the
    front cover of the December 4 edition of the weekly magazine
    Komentarii with the headline `Yushchenko has negotiated the seat of
    premier.' The billboards, which showed Yushchenko and Yanukovych
    embracing in a pose reminiscent of the Soviet and East German leaders
    Leonid Brezhnev and Erich Honecker, were ordered to be taken down. The
    Ukrainian media complained of `censorship.'

    Secondly, if the document unveiled by Kozachok was indeed a `forgery'
    then why did the president order the prosecutor-general to launch an
    investigation into the publication of a `state secret?' Yushchenko
    ordered a full report within ten days on how the document was leaked,
    while presidential secretariat head Vera Ulianchenko initiated an
    internal investigation of Kozachok's employment record (Ukrayinska
    Pravda, December 28).

    The secret agreement aims to ensure `political stability and economic
    development' and to end years of political in-fighting. Both sides
    agreed compromises based upon avoiding raising issues that are
    considered divisive within Ukrainian society. Yushchenko agreed not to
    raise rehabilitating and promoting nationalist leaders or demanding
    compulsory Ukrainian language tests in schools and universities. In
    return, Yanukovych would not advocate Russian as a second state
    language or call for a referendum on Ukrainian NATO membership (UNIAN,
    December 25). Yanukovych has downplayed his election program
    commitment to Russian as a state language and Yushchenko has not
    mentioned NATO in his program.

    The next section of the secret agreement calls for Yushchenko and
    Yanukovych not to criticize each other. The 2010 election campaign is
    noticeable for the absence of criticism by Yushchenko of Yanukovych
    and the former's daily accusations against Tymoshenko. Yushchenko has
    asked voters to stay at home and not vote in round two, arguing there
    is no difference between Tymoshenko and Yanukovych who will inevitably
    enter the February 7 run off. A low turn-out in `Orange Ukraine' would
    result in Yanukovych's election, while a large voter turn-out would
    ensure Tymoshenko's election since the combined `Orange' vote is
    larger. Yushchenko is in effect calling on his supporters to not vote
    negatively against Yanukovych in the second round.

    Playing on Western Ukrainian, anti-Russian nationalism, Yushchenko has
    accused Tymoshenko of being `unpatriotic' by referring to the fact
    that she has only one ethnic Ukrainian parent (her Armenian father
    separated from her mother when she was a child). In addition, since
    the summer of 2008 Yushchenko has repeatedly condemned as `treasonous'
    Tymoshenko's cultivation of a pragmatic economic-energy relationship
    with Russia that has brought her support from Western Europeans
    anxious to avoid another gas crisis in January. Yushchenko has
    appealed to Ukrainians to vote for a `Ukrainian premier' (meaning
    himself) who will not, allegedly unlike Tymoshenko, sell Ukraine to
    Russia by permitting the Black Sea Fleet to remain in Sevastopol
    beyond 2017, which would require a constitutional amendment that no
    president could undertake (Ukrayinska Pravda, January 3). Tymoshenko
    would also allegedly transfer Ukraine's gas pipelines to Russia, an
    accusation which contradicts Tymoshenko's mobilization of parliament
    in February 2007 to vote for a law banning any transfer of the
    pipelines from Ukrainian state control and her March 2009 agreement
    with the EU to modernize the pipeline infrastructure without Russian
    involvement.

    Tymoshenko is also accused of being the `biggest threat to democracy'
    in Ukraine, Yushchenko has claimed (Ukrayinska Pravda, December 24).
    This accusation ignores the perilous state of Ukrainian democracy, as
    shown by recent Western and Ukrainian surveys, which reveal that
    Ukrainians associate democracy with `chaos' following years of
    instability and elite in-fighting.

    The `Coalition of Political Reconciliation and Development of Ukraine'
    would propose Yushchenko as its candidate for prime minister. The
    basis of this coalition remains unexplained, since Yushchenko controls
    only 15 out of 72 Our Ukraine deputies.

    Yushchenko has always wavered between supporting a grand coalition
    with the Party of Regions or a `democratic' coalition with the
    Tymoshenko bloc (BYuT). Following the March 2006 elections Yushchenko
    sent the Prime Minister (and head of Our Ukraine) Yuriy Yekhanurov to
    negotiate a grand coalition and Roman Besmertnyi to form a
    `democratic' coalition. Following the dissolution of parliament in
    April 2007, Yushchenko negotiated a compromise with the Party of
    Regions to hold pre-term elections in September in exchange for a
    grand coalition. During the 2007 election campaign Yushchenko
    campaigned for a `democratic' coalition, which was established with
    Tymoshenko as its candidate for prime minister in December 2007. Raisa
    Bohatyriova, the head of the Party of Regions parliamentary faction,
    was appointed as secretary of the National Security and Defense
    Council (NRBO) who, together with the presidential secretariat head
    Viktor Baloga, spent 2008 seeking to undermine the Tymoshenko
    government in which Yushchenko had demanded that half the cabinet
    posts go to Our Ukraine.

    The agreement seeks a grand coalition through a Yanukovych presidency,
    but will again fail for the same reasons that it has in the past.
    Yushchenko will be unable to ensure that a parliamentary majority will
    vote for him: Our Ukraine deputy Oleksandr Tretiakov said that
    parliament would never vote for Yushchenko's candidacy (Ukrayinska
    Pravda, December 15). Tymoshenko would therefore remain a
    constitutionally powerful prime minister under President Yanukovych.

    http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_c ache=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=35871&tx_ttn ews%5BbackPid%5D=7&cHash=e9627f75db
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