RUSSIAN-UKRAINIAN STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP IN RUINS

Published: 25 October 2003 y., Saturday
The Ukrainian-Russian "strategic partnership" -- which was devoid of real content during Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma's first term in office and under Russian President Boris Yeltsin -- was beginning to be finally filled with some substance during Kuchma's second term and under Russian President Vladimir Putin. As the Kuchmagate crisis unfolded after November 2000 and the reformist government of Prime Minister Viktor Yushchenko was removed in April 2001, Ukraine's multivector foreign policy reoriented toward Russia and the CIS. For Moscow, the crowning achievements of this reorientation came this year. 2002 was designated "the Year of Russia in Ukraine," and in January 2003 Kuchma became the first non-Russian CIS leader to be elected head of the CIS Council of Heads of State. On 17 September, Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan, and Belarus signed the CIS Single Economic Space (EEP), only 12 days prior to the beginning of the territorial conflict over Tuzla. Ukraine's reorientation toward Russia and the CIS seemed set to continue. Kuchma desperately needs Putin's support in the October 2004 presidential election in order to ensure a suitable successor -- if indeed a suitable one can be found -- is elected. One way to achieve this was to again play the Russian card in eastern Ukraine, a tactic Kuchma successfully used in the 1994 presidential election. This can now be ruled out. Pro-Kuchma Crimean Prime Minister Serhiy Kunitsyn lamented this week that "I don't know whose idea it was to build the dam, but I do know that it is ruining everything achieved during the Year of Russia in Ukraine." As the crisis escalated, calls from within Ukraine's elites to speed up steps to join NATO, an objective first outlined in a presidential decree in July 2002, became more frequent. Our Ukraine Deputy Yuriy Yekhanurov, head of the Verkhovna Rada's Industrial Policy and Enterprise Committee, told parliament on 22 October that Ukraine should rebuild a small nuclear deterrent as the only way to deter similar threats to Ukraine's territorial integrity. In a secret presidential decree dated 21 October, Kuchma outlined steps to be taken to defend Ukraine's territorial integrity. Those steps included Ukraine quitting the recently agreed EEP if Russia attempts to encroach on its territory. Other nonmilitary steps include appealing to the declared nuclear powers, who provided "security assurances" in return for Ukraine's nuclear disarmament in 1994-96, the UN Security Council, NATO, and the OSCE. A further step outlined in the decree was for the Foreign Ministry unilaterally to declare the Kerch Strait and the Azov Sea internal Ukrainian waters.
Šaltinis: rferl.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Baltic Prime Ministers Agree to Take Decision on Swedlit in December

During the Tartu meeting of the Baltic Council of Ministers, acting Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas, Estonian Prime Minister Andrus Ansip, and Latvian Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis have agreed to continue their cooperation with a view to establish a functioning Baltic electricity market by 2012. more »

Valdas Adamkus: The Nazi and Soviet-committed crimes against humanity will be equally condemned and their victims commemorated

President Valdas Adamkus, currently visiting Kiev, delivered a speech at the international forum “Ukraine Remembers – World Recognizes” held at the Shevchenko National Opera House to mark the 75th anniversary of Holomomor. more »

President to take part in the commemoration of Ukraine's Great Famine in Kiev

Today, November 21, the President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus goes to Kiev to take part in the events dedicated to the 75th anniversary of the Great Famine in Ukraine, Holodomor. more »

President supports the candidature of A. Kubilius to the Prime Minister's position

President Valdas Adamkus has signed a decree proposing the Seimas to consider the candidature of Andrius Kubilius to the position of the Prime Minister of the Republic of Lithuania. more »

Keystones of the crisis prevention plan discussed by Adamkus and Kubilius

President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus received the leader of the ruling coalition Andrius Kubilius whom the President had instructed to form the new Cabinet. more »

President Adamkus says Lithuania's membership in the EU opens up new opportunities

President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus received letters of credence from the Ambassador of Malaysia Kamarudin Bin Mustafa and the Ambassador of South Korea Geun-hyeong Yim. more »

President received letters of credence from New Zealand's Ambassador

President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus received letters of credence from New Zealand's Ambassador Ms. Penelope Jane Ridings. more »

Acting Prime Minister Kirkilas on a visit to Tartu

On Friday, 21 November, acting Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas is going to take part in the annual meeting of the Baltic Council of Ministers (BCM) to be held in Tartu, Estonia. more »

Meeting of Baltic and Visegrad Heads of Government in Warsaw

The Lithuanian Prime Minister participated in the meeting of the heads of Governments of Visegrad Four and Baltic States – Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania – in Warsaw. more »

Missiles in Kaliningrad will surely not add to the fight against terrorism, says President Adamkus

President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus describes Russia's plans to deploy short-range missile system “Iskander” in the Kaliningrad region as announced by the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, as beyond comprehension more »