...and this may have influenced the Supreme Court decision
Here's another great article by Taras Kuzio. This guy is always worth reading about Ukraine. Good thing there is the Eurasian Daily Monitor to print his words.[if someone has a siteconnect for me on this one, let me know] And of course a hat tip to the Action Ukraine Report for getting this info out where I could find it.
It's not just advantageous that Yushchenko's side enough to release the tapes as it is that the opposition now has loads more compromising material on Yanukovych, the SBU has also decided not to cover up the administration's dirty dealings, to the contrary, they're positively shining a spotlight on them.
YANUKOVYCH-GATE UNFOLDS AFTER UKRAINIAN ELECTIONS
Yet another Ukrainian political scandal over tape-recorded conversations
By Taras Kuzio, Eurasia Daily Monitor
Volume 1, Issue 139, Jamestown Foundation
Washington, D.C., Friday, December 3
The
first year of Leonid Kuchma's second term as president of Ukraine was
marked by a scandal that eventually became known as Kuchmagate. The
affair was triggered by the release of secret tape recordings made in
his office by a security guard. Two years later another scandal
emerged; "Kolchuga-gate" concerned Kuchma's authorization of the sale
of Kolchuga military radar systems to Iraq.
Now Ukraine has
Yanukovychgate. This scandal involves a large number of audiotapes
related to Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych. These tapes, which are of
far better quality than those made by Mykola Melnychenko in 1999-2000,
were made by the Security Service (SBU) and leaked to challenger Viktor
Yushchenko days after the presidential runoff on November 21.
The
Yanukovych camp did attempt to block electronic surveillance of its
activities. But their efforts obviously failed. Unlike in the
Kuchmagate tapes, such an extensive operation could have only been
undertaken by more
than one SBU officer. The SBU has a technical operations department and does control and monitor government communications.
Significantly,
the Yanukovych audiotapes were accepted as evidence by the Supreme
Court, which is sitting to discuss mass violations in the runoff.
Ukrainian courts never accepted the Melnychenko tapes were as
evidence.
The SBU tapes will add to the documents intercepted by Yushchenko
supporters that the authorities had attempted to smuggle out of the
presidential administration building.
The tapes contain hundreds
of intercepted telephone conversations from Yanukovych's "shadow
election headquarters" between October 30 and November 23, taking in
both rounds of the elections. Yanukovych always
had two campaign
headquarters. The official face, led by the dapper chairman of the
National Bank, Serhiy Tyhipko, played on the positive attributes of
Yanukovych's election program, such as his social policies. The "shadow
campaign" headquarters had a fundamentally different role a nd was led
by Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Klyuev, a close Donetsk ally of
Yanukovych.
The shadow office was established to channel funds
above the legislated candidate spending limits and to undertake
activities that undermined the Yushchenko campaign. The shadow team
also coordinated state- administrative resources and the media in favor
of Yanukovych and against Yushchenko.
Tyhipko and Yanukovych
always presented themselves as conducting a "free and fair" campaign
through three strategies. First, they denied that a shadow campaign
existed. Second, they insisted that dirty tricks came
from other
candidates (i.e. the phony candidates promoted by the authorities).
Third, they insisted that both Yushchenko and Yanukovych had allegedly
hired Russian political advisors. The Yanukovych camp hired two
long-time associates of Russian President Vladimir Putin, Marat Gelman
and Gleb Pavlovsky, who run the "Russian Club" in Kyiv.
In
reality the Yanukovych campaign had four inter-related units: 1)
Tyhipko's official campaign; 2) Kluyev's shadow campaign; 3)
"technical" or "fake" candidates; and 4) Russian advisors. Of these
four, only Tyhipko's had a "clean" image. The other three components
were behind Ukraine's dirtiest election to date. To suggest -- as
Tyhipko and Yanukovych are now doing -- that they knew nothing of the
other three elements is unbelievable.
The audiotapes provide
information as to how voting was conducted and massaged, "who directed
this process and how, and why the voting dynamics changed so
intricately during the presidential elections in Ukraine" (Zerkalo
nedeli, November 27). The tapes also provide insight into how the
Yanukovych campaign added upwards of 2 million votes -- and raised
turnout by 19% -- in Donetsk oblast between rounds one and two. In
comparison, turnout increased by only 3% in Lviv, Yushchenko's base.
Unlike
some of the Melnychenko tapes, the voices on these new recordings are
clearly identifiable. These figures include Kluyev, Viktor Medvedchuk
(head of the presidential administration), Sergei Kivalov (chairman of
the
Central Election Commission [CEC]), Sergei Kluyev, "political
technologist" Yuriy Levenetz, and long-time Yanukovych adviser Eduard
Prutnik.
One of the most interesting sections on the tapes is a
conversation about how the official results in round two were to be
"massaged." One conversation, early in the evening on election day and
three days before the official results were released by the CEC,
describes how, "We agreed about 3-3.5% difference to our advantage" (www.maidan.uar.net/audio/). It is unlikely that it is a mere coincidence that the CEC declared Yanukovych victor with a 2.72% lead.
The
audiotapes provide concrete evidence of the existence of a "transit
server" whose purpose was to manipulate the results as they were sent
from local Territorial Election Commissions (TECs) to the CEC. The
"transit
server" was based in the presidential administration.
Details
of the "transit server" were leaked to the Yushchenko camp and the U.S.
Embassy in Kyiv during the first round of the elections, but the
authorities always denied its existence. Nevertheless, the long time it
took the CEC to receive protocols sent by electronic mail from TECs
always seemed suspicious.
The tapes also include conversations
by Kluyev, ordering provocations to be undertaken to discredit
Yushchenko. In one instance, Kluyev orders an unknown person to
"organize some fights or something like this."
The audiotapes,
together with other mounting evidence collected by the Yushchenko camp
and submitted to the Supreme Court, proves beyond any shadow of a doubt
that the authorities never intended to hold a clean
election.
While
possessing knowledge of pre-planned election fraud, Kuchma and
Yanukovych nevertheless repeatedly "guaranteed" to the United States
and EU that Ukraine would hold free and fair elections. This is,
therefore, a
major case of deception conducted by Ukraine's leaders that has now backfired and may lead to their own undoing.
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Reader Comments (4)
http://jamestown.org/publications_view.php?publication_id=14
Oh well! :) :)
And yeah, there was some talk of having this material for a couple days, I'm about one day behind, and using material from Taras Kuzio, who needs time to think over and evaluate info before it comes out with his name on it. But there have been papers as well as tapes, so I'm not sure when everything first started coming out. I first heard rumors the day before yesterday, but didn't have them solid.