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Way to not kill protesters, Mr. Kuchma

Well, drat. One of the conciliatory items I'd planned to put in the article I want to send to the Atlantic has just come out in the opinion section of the Kyiv Post in a beefed-up form.

Basically, lead editor (and owner, I think) Jed Sunden says Kuchma should be pardoned, even calls him a "Hero of Ukraine" only half-jokingly, for not sending in police to beat up protesters during the Orange Revolution. In the article he makes reference to the NYT article I talked about yesterday, which lauds the SBU top brass for working with the opposition behind the scenes, but also credits Kuchma for arguing down suggestions from Medvedchuk and Yanukovych that the police break up the protests the hard way.

The key passage:

But despite my concern over the failures of Kuchma’s presidency [detailed elsewhere in the article], I believe he should be regarded as a hero, and be allowed to go off to his retirement peacefully and quietly. Not simply because he is truly leaving Ukraine a stronger and better country than it was when he assumed office, but because he – as much as any one – ensured that there would be no bloodshed in Kyiv, and that the Orange Revolution would attain its goals without loss of life.

Maybe Yushchenko would still be the next president of Ukraine if the troops had been called out. Maybe the troops would have disobeyed orders. Maybe the protesters would have successfully resisted an attack. But I, for one, am glad these scenarios were never put to the test.

I have also been planning to get a couple words in about Kuchma's admirable restraint in this matter, and I must admit it's irksome that I'm going to give credit for the idea to someone else, even though I've been tossing it around in my mind for days. But I still think Jed gives too much credit to Tymoshenko's "small ruddy rat".

I'm very glad Kuchma didn't put Ukrainian troops to the test on the streets of Kyiv, but the next government should feel free to dig through all the mounds of corruption his government produced. In his first term in office, Kuchma behaved rather well, under the circumstances. He de-escalated the Crimean separatist issue without bloodshed, and hired the right reformists, Yushchenko foremost among them, who could sort out the inflation crisis.

But the fact that he hired Yushchenko does not somehow balance out that fact that he later fired Yushchenko and all the rest of the reformists to focus on four years of self-aggrandizement. Kuchma gets no credit for allowing the protest to "attain its goals without loss of life", because if Kuchma had not derailed the Ukrainian political system and his circle hadn't thrown all its efforts into Yanukovych's fraud campaign, there would not have been any need for an Orange Revolution at all.

The worst part of the argument is that it hijacks the protest the same way the NYT article does. The #1 reason the Orange Revolution achieved its goals without violence was that the protesters acted without violence. The ministries, departments, officers, and President that refrained from violence against the protesters didn't act rightly, they reacted rightly. There's a world of difference.

Posted on Thursday, January 20, 2005 at 04:20AM by Registered CommenterDan McMinn in , | Comments4 Comments

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Reader Comments (4)

Veronica is arguing that the story may not be so... so. http://vkhokhl.blogspot.com/2005/01/radio-libertys-ukrainian-service.html
January 20, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterRobert Mayer
Hey Robert, great link, I'm going to promote it.
January 20, 2005 | Registered CommenterDan McMinn
Obviously the machinations are in high gear to deflect blame (thanks NYT), appear as an all-along supporter (of the OR) or at worst neutral, and to cover some influential behinds.

But this finger pointing by the opposition misses the whole point.

If you wish a negativist approach, then yeah go ahead and find as many culprits, real or imaginary, conspiratorial or rational, as you can find, and give them the Abu Ghraib treatment while consolidating your own power position at other's expense.

If you however are of a positivist bent, then you would want to get the truth and facts out, to expose the behind the scene anti-state activities, scheming and profiteering - but for a historical perspective. Then you would try to understand and then learn from this experience, and then you would try to improve (reform) the system, and then you would get on with your lives.

My choice would be the positivist approach.

The influential Kyiv Post editor Jed Sunden is being a REAL jerk for not calling for a truth commission - and instead trying to whitewash Kuchma, when the facts remain obscured.
January 21, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterManucher
A really great analysis of this article can be had at: http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=407&issue_id=3207&article_id=2369139

I love the Eurasia Daily Monitor. Such solid coverage for free.

Manucher: I'm all for emphasizing the positive as well. My purpose here, though, is not to suggest an agenda for Yushchenko to follow but to give credit where credit is due, and prevent the theft of that credit. If a weathervane SBU chief manages to usurp credit for the OR from the protesters, some very brave and principles Ukrainians will be sidelined.

In addition, much better to take in all Yanukovych's deserters as deserters, not as if they'd been opposition double-agents all the time.

My purpose with this site has always been to express how much Ukrainians gave to this protest, and why. I'm also all for reforms and a gradualist approach, to pull in the less unsavory oligarchs (where necessary). That doesn't mean believing their press releases, though.
January 25, 2005 | Registered CommenterDan McMinn

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