A Private War
Tymoshenko and Yushchenko's Loudest Confrontation Yet: Privatization
It used to be that Yushchenko would send uncountable directives over to Tymoshenko and she would blithely ignore most of them and work towards her own purposes while saying she "admires" the president. He would veto what she did, issue a new directive, and the process would start again.
Recently, things have degenerated.
The major sticking point is Tymoshenko's extensive privatization plan, the proceeds from which she intends to use mostly for government remunerations (or handouts) to holders of Soviet bank accounts made worthless in the aftermath of the fall of the Soviet Union. Yushchenko considers this an irresponsible use of the money, and accuses her of privatizing into the hands of her allies--the claim made by pretty much every party against a privatization by one of its opponents.
So, for example, since State Property Fund Chairwoman Valentyna Semenyuk has been one of the main agents blocking Tymoshenko's privatizations, Tymoshenko kicked her out and installed her own chairman, Andriy Portnov. Yushchenko reinstated Semenyuk, cancelled the privatizations, and issued a "yellow card" warning to Tymoshenko's government. The Constitutional Court overturned his decision, and Tymoshenko told Portnov to ignore it. Along a parallel track, the privatization of, for example the Odesa Pre-Port Plant has been ordered, suspended, ordered again, and again suspended. The Eurasia Daily Monitor has a summary of all the tit-for-tat.
In retaliation, it seems, BYT lined up with the Party of Regions and Tymoshenko said she supports a vote to decrease the President's power in favor of the Parliament (and she's been taking on a number of advisors from the defunct and unmourned SDPU(o) of Viktor Medvedchuk, though this may not be a retaliatory gesture as much as a tactical one). However, when Yushchenko saw that he lacked the support of the Constitutional Court and the Parliament, he backed down. His statement is a classic one of a politician accidentally saying the truth:
Let us not put to question which organization [of power] we need, but focus on the task of achieving, through dialogue, through the work of public commission, through public referendum, a system of counterweights which would ensure serene future for us and our children.
Exactly. Now why have you been wasting your time on this issue practically since you got into office?
Not that Tymoshenko or Yanukovych are any less to blame. The last link goes to an article in Dzerkalo Tizhnya: it's wordy, but overall a great article. The line that pretty much sums everything up:
Each of the three top Ukrainian political players more or less realize the need of the reforms, but all explain their slackness by the following logic: “Now preparations for the decisive battle are going on. What is of critical importance now is to garner as much resources and voter support as possible. It is imperative that sufficient financial, media and electoral reserves be built up. I will begin attending to the country’s salvation and development once I take the country’s top office for a long enough period”. The result is that Tymoshenko and Yushchenko are competing in populism, while Yanukovych, in the absence of State resource, is busy with NATO and language-related issues. This provides an explanation as to why we keep making the same mistake, which is because we make no headway. A country cannot move ahead unless and until the main state and public challenges are correctly identified and begun to be dealt with. Purely personal and corporate interests of policy makers cannot provide enough progress to drive us away from the same old mistake.
Speaking of wasting their time on political games while gas and inflation crises loom...
The Kyiv Mayoral Election vs. Macroeconomics
Taras Kuzio, writing in the Eurasia Daily Monitor, thinks BYT's candidate in the Kyiv mayoral election, Turchynov, will be able to get past Klitchko and Chernovetsky, citing corruption charges against both of the latter. I still fail to see how Turchynov is going avoid similar charges sufficiently to overcome the huge gap in public support between himself and the main contenders--particularly since there will be no runoff. Not that we should want Chernovetsky to win (which recent polls think he might, using the same tactics as last year).
This mayoral election is the biggest distraction from the two main problems for Ukraine, both of which are economic: inflation and fuel price hikes.
While Tymoshenko was certainly overstating things when she said her government was getting the highest appreciation in the world and holding inflation policy unchanged will be enough, it is true that she was praised by the WTO.
The IMF was more moderate in its praise. In this report it did not actively argue against her privatization plan, but it definitely suggested holding back at least some of the money thus earned to promote a more balanced budget (meaning less going to Tymoshenko's handouts). Another one of its main points is that the hryvnia should be allowed to float against the dollar (meaning appreciate, in the current economic climate). According to the Ukrainian Journal, the NBU seems interested and Tymoshenko has reigned in her criticism of the bank on at least this issue. The WTO and IMF both make the situation with inflation seem less dire than Dzerkalo Tizhnya seems to think it is, but DzT bases more of its assessment on an expected massive fuel price hike from Russia (something I also think is imminent, and the IMF notes as a potentially major problem).
Two More Good Items
One alternative to politics-watching is this entry on Ukrainiana about Chernobyl. It includes Taras's own story from living (six years old) in Kyiv at the time. It also is heavily laden with YouTube videos related to the event.
Another wonderful and unrelated article by John Marone at Eurasia Home praises the introduction of national standardized university examinations. One step forward for transparency, one step backward for corruption.

Reader Comments (34)
Issuing 800 decrees, and relying on a punk like Baloha, is no way to run a country.
It's is very difficult to figure out Yushchenko's behavior, even taking into account a desire to survive politically as president. There's something that he has not been telling people, and he's hinted at it vaguely in some speeches.
Chernovetsky, the space cadet, has got to go.
I should have written about the state of the sarcophagus and the giant delays in the construction of a new safe confinement.
Given the looming meltdown in the Orange camp, Tymoshenko commercials should start providing a list of fallout shelters.
first, the dangers of to the EU of not including Ukraine
http://www.europesworld.org/EWSettings/Article/tabid/78/Default.aspx?Id=45f9c820-2437-49cc-b17f-8a9e442778c0
second, an article-analysis in The Economist about Russian propaganda in the context of the Orange Revolution in Ukraine
http://www.economist.com/daily/columns/europeview/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11287933
There's that "stability" word again.
elmer: likewise as IIU, thanks for the links, esp EuropeWorld. I agree more or less with the basic premise of the Economist article, but in the effort to be brief I think they overplayed their hand. Nobody wants to put Kuchma in power, but that wasn't what was at issue in the Orange Revolution, either: Yanukovych's candidacy was what was in question.
And, of course, Yanukovych has been elected Primer Minister at least once subsequently.
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/eo20080508a1.html
Inflation caused by Ukraine's peg to dollar
By ANDERS ASLUND KIEV
KIEV — Inflation in Ukraine is skyrocketing. By March, it reached 26 percent per year and continues to rise. Although prices are increasing around the world, Ukraine's is extreme, twice as much as in neighboring Russia. Amazingly, instead of dampening inflation, Ukraine's central bank is stoking it.
Ukraine's prices started spiraling out of control around the time when Yuliya Tymoshenko returned as prime minister last December. Malicious observers suggest that she is to blame for pursuing populist social expenditures. But this is false. Her government actually tightened the budget just before New Year. Indeed, Finance Minister Viktor Pynzenyk reports that the state recorded a budget surplus of 0.6 percent of GDP during the first quarter of 2008.
This is not surprising, because state revenues expand with rising prices, while expenditures are largely fixed. But Tymoshenko's government has, in reality, done a solid fiscal job. State finances are generally in good shape, with public debt at just 11 percent of GDP. According to the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU), international reserves have grown steadily and now stand at $33 billion.
The real cause of Ukraine's inflation is that its currency, the hryvnia, remains pegged to the U.S. dollar.
The International Monetary Fund has persistently warned Ukraine that its dollar peg could cause a financial crisis because of over- or undervaluation, and for years has called on Ukraine to free its exchange rate. But the NBU refused to do so — making Ukraine the last country in Central and Eastern Europe to tie its currency to the dollar.
Ukraine's powerful industrialists praised the NBU's low exchange-rate policy, believing it makes the country more competitive. They ignore the fact that the NBU can control only the nominal appreciation of the hryvnia. But costs are determined by the real revaluation, which is the sum of exchange-rate changes and inflation.
The dollar peg has also forced the NBU to pursue a loose monetary policy. Ukraine's current refinance rate is 16 percent a year, 10 percent less than inflation, which means that Ukraine has a negative real interest rate of 10 percent a year. As a result, Ukraine's money supply, M3, exploded by no less than 52 percent in the last year, which points to inflation hitting 30 percent soon.
The NBU's leadership understands that it must act to contain inflation, but its insistence on the dollar peg ties their hands, because it prevents them from raising interest rates sufficiently. Instead, they have reverted to strict reserve requirements, effectively rationing credit and thereby causing a domestic credit squeeze in the midst of the current international financial crisis, which is likely to force some medium-size banks into bankruptcy because of liquidity problems. Rationing is always worse than a market.
Why does the NBU persist with this harmful policy?
Incompetence is one reason, but politics is probably the decisive cause. The NBU is subordinate to President Viktor Yushchenko, who, despite naming Tymoshenko as prime minister, seems more interested in harming her politically than in capping inflation.
The flaws in the NBU's policy are so obvious it will be forced to free the exchange rate, but it might act too late. Even now, in the midst of an inflationary crisis, the NBU wants to move in small steps, evidently failing to grasp the severity of the crisis. The NBU needs to announce that it no longer has an exchange-rate target and that it will stop intervening by ending its purchases of dollars on the currency market.
If the NBU lets the exchange rate float, Ukrainians are likely to exchange billions of dollars into hryvnia, driving up the hryvnia exchange rate. That would contain Ukraine's inflation, as the NBU could restrict the money supply through high interest rates rather than rationing.
Can anyone IMAGINE bundles of hv rather than bundles of US greenbacks in briefcases? Honestly, truly DO Ukrainians TRUST their own currency? No. At any opportunity want to be paid in foreign currency and it is more than just the 'novelty' of the foreign. Even pensioners obtaining from banks their Oschadbank money could do so in dollars not just hv (the policy has now been changed to only passing out the 'lost' savings in hv.)
Elmer thanks for the article but Aslund has been 'turned' and rather than offering objective coverage now seems only to toe the Nemyria line. sigh.
Aslund unfortunately is correct in his assessment but unfortunately only 'blames' one side. Lousy crops from last year's bad weather and really messed up farming and govt polices as well as CORRUPTION, are also to blame for the spiraling inflation as well as rising fuel costs. And unfortunately this year, a) crop policy has not been changed and lots of farmers are going to go deeper and deeper into debt with some taking the option to sell off which will be purchased by speculators and developers b) energy prices will go up as well and c) the centralized, messed up Soviet style Ministry of Agriculture has not been turned upside down (even with lots of money NOT going to farmers but gone where?) ---- so arable land and lots of it will not be farmed. And existing small farmers are finding times tougher and tougher and now with pressure being levied on governors to maintain price controls ... not good.
Let's all HOPE REALLY HARD for great weather conditions because otherwise EVEN GREATER INFLATION. Because the fight is going on about the State Property Fund and not the AgroMin.
And now with May 16th looming and Ukraine going into WTO - small farmers will face extinction except for the plots of land that people cultivate in order to feed themselves. Which will also be gobbled up one by one even in illegal sales, one hectare at a time.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121055696814984165.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
And the stupid селепки would finally get their act together.
And demand that the "beekeeper" Yushchenko get his act together also.
In 17 years of independence, a few people managed to rob Ukraine blind, to the tune of millions, to the detriment of the vast majority of Ukrainians.
One of those people, Kuchma, today sits on the board of Shevchenko University, one of the great learning institutions in the world.
Why? What educational credentials does Kuchma have? It is abominable. It is an insult to the learned men and women of one of the finest educational establishments in the world. That's just one example.
Another is Lazarenko, former Prime Minister, who fled to the US with millions, and bought himself Eddie Murphy's old mansion for over $10 million. He was not prosecuted in Ukraine.
But he was prosecuted in the US for trying to launder money and breaking US laws.
Olena Franchuk, Kuchma's daughter, just bought an $800 million dollar mansion in Londongrad, on the same street as the mansion owned by the mayor of Moscow. How did she get that kind of money?
Brodsky runs for mayor of Kyiv - and gets caught on video giving people the finger, demonstrating his enormous contempt for the Ukrainian people and the Ukrainian electorate.
Chernovetsky, the current mayor of Kyiv, doesn't speak Ukrainian, and steals millions of dollars worth of land for himself and his government buddies.
Akhmetov, the wealthiest man in Ukraine, claims to do charitable work - where is it?
These things happen, IIU, because people allow them to happen.
I'm not like Brodsky, giving Ukrainians the finger.
I'm with Tymoshenko - "let's build the best government in the world."
Are you really sure you want to pick on me?
How long are Ukrainians going to tolerate space cadets like Chernovetsky?
How long are Ukrainians going to tolerate a mayor in the capital of Ukraine who doesn't speak Ukrainian?
How long are Ukrainians going to sit passively and say "oh, gee, someday maybe we'll have good government and no corruption, all in good time"?
Is the corruption any secret? Is the resulting detriment a secret?
Ukrainian history is full of its leaders fighting against each other, with disastrous consequences. One example - Mazepa stood up against Russia, together with the Swedes. But he could only muster a few thousand troops, because the rest of the idiot Cossacks decided they wouldn't fight against their "Christian Orthodox brethren" - the Russian ones, the ones who had taken away rights of Ukrainians, and who had oppressed Ukraine.
Yushchenko himself has repeatedly talked about corruption - and then you can look at what he's done.
I'm not insulting anyone, IIU. I just keep wondering in amazement how a corrupt space cadet thug like Chernovetsky can pull 36% in the recent pre-election polls in Kyiv.
Do you think that voting for Chernovetsky comports with the words of the Ukrainian national anthem - "і покахем що ми браття козацького роду" - "and we will show that we are brothers of the Cossack nation"
If Chernovetsky gets elected yet again, then the Ukrainian national anthem should be changed to:
"і показем що ми вміємо продати свій голос за маленький міщок - гречанів"
"and we will show that we know how to sell our vote for a small bag of buckwheat"
And I've previously linked to the article on Unian which discusses how Chernovetsky and his ilk are carrying little food bags around to the voters of Kyiv.
"we will lay down our souls and our lives for our freedom"
from the Ukrainian national anthem.
Those words mean something.
In the 21st century, and in the mayoral elections in Kyiv, noone is asking anyone to lay down their life.
But is it too much to ask to vote Chernovetsky out, and finally get someone in as mayor who is competent, and not corrupt?
for ex. who? would Klitschko be competent? or Turchynov not corrupt?
And whatever your frustration level, whatever your thoughts, you DID insult Ukrainians. Shame on you.
Chernovetsky and his team are very media savvy and SMART. Whatever their views may be they do not insult the locals who are the voting backbone but do everything to get them on their side. Their "troika" includes a wealthy businessman (Cherno), an embroidered Ukrainian language speaking youth and a hot tamale of a babe. Demographically they have something for everyone who is of voting age. And they connect to their supporters - whether stalwart or one offs, who yes, do really have it so tough that putting food on the table is a hardship. Plus they have the "troika dream team" have their opponents to thank - for being patronizing, short sighted (those pics of Cherno with jacket over shoulder went up two years ago - think about it - two years ago Cherno knew that he had to curry favor), bumbling, inept and COMPLETELY UNCONNECTED TO THE CORE VOTING CONSTITUENCY. Yep, may care about them on voting time - but at least they care at all.
Closest to ChernoCo is Tymoshenko in connecting to voters and I completely disagree with Dickinson - the only way to sell Turchynov is to ally herself with him in posters, voting lists etc.
http://www.businessukraine.com.ua/ego-trip
But imho no matter what I write, how much etc. I don't think you will get the locals either as you seem to see them as the "other" and so very diff. from yourself. btw I hv spent alot of time on this already and still smarting over your insulting Ukrainian citizens, so signing off.
I am not campaigning here - this is a site for discussion and analysis.
And you are absolutely right - it seems to be a sovok legacy that few, if any, candidates in Ukraine, understand that democracy means candidates knocking on doors, shaking hands with their constituents, and getting across the idea that public service is about fellow citizens stepping forward for the public good of their fellow citizens.
I think you are also right about the joining of Tymoshenko with Turchinov - and I believe I have seen such handbills or fliers, with them pictured together.
People in other countries, in other democracies, have a hard time putting food on the table also, IIU. Ukraine is no exception there.
I would hate to see Chernoco back in, in any event, so that he can simply continue his corruption.
In the US, for example, there is no "party list" system.
And in the race for President, Barrak Obama has relied mainly on small donations from PEOPLE, which average about $95. The legal limit is $2300 per person. The money has been raised largely over the Internet. And each campaign has plenty of volunteers at the local level, people who are not paid professionals.
Democracy requires participation, and information, and analysis and thought, and watchfulness, as you know very well already.
Each of the presidential candidates has had his or her share of meetings with the people, long before today.
In Ukraine, one buys one way onto a party list, with money stolen from the people.
Where does the campaign money come from? Noone in Ukraine seems to know.
Except the ones who have stolen, and continue to steal it.
If you can see through Chernoco, how come others can't?
Or won't?
And if they won't see through Cherno, what does that tell you about them?
And if they do see through Cherno, and still let him stay in office - what does that tell you about them?
Is Ukraine going to be in a perpetual Catch-22?
How many times have I seen on Ukrainian blogs -
"бідний бо дурний, дурний бо бідний"
"he's poor because he's stupid, and stupid because he's poor"
Why was it dangerous for people like Vyacheslav Chornovil and Levko Lukyanenko to speak out?
Because no one stood with them when they should have.
What was the Orange Revolution about, if not about people standing together and saying "enough"?
I don't think there are any excuses for continuing to keep Cherno in office.
McCain Consultant Is Tied
To Work for Ukraine Party
Political Group
Had Opposed
Pro-Western Bloc
By MARY JACOBY and GLENN R. SIMPSON
May 14, 2008; Page A7
A consultant to Sen. John McCain hired a public-relations firm last year to burnish the U.S. image of a Ukrainian political party backed by Russian leader Vladimir Putin, according to documents filed with the Justice Department.
The lobbying firm of Davis Manafort Inc. arranged for the public-relations firm's work through an affiliate last spring, at the same time Davis Manafort was being paid by the Republican presidential candidate's campaign. The firm is co-owned by lobbyist Rick Davis, manager of Sen. McCain's presidential campaign, and longtime Republican strategist Paul Manafort.
The Arizona senator has endorsed a political movement in Ukraine that is at odds with the Putin-backed Party of Regions.
The work for the Ukrainian party represents the latest issue to arise for the McCain campaign involving aides' ties to foreign interests. Last weekend, the campaign parted ways with two former lobbyists for the military government of Myanmar after their ties were reported in Newsweek.
This year, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton demoted her chief campaign strategist, Mark Penn, after it emerged that he was advising the Colombian government on how to win passage of a free-trade agreement that she opposed. Mr. Penn is also world-wide chief executive of Burson-Marsteller, a public-relations and lobbying firm.
McCain campaign spokesman Brian Rogers said Mr. Davis receives no income from Davis Manafort, although he still owns a share of the firm. "He earns no money from their activities while he is on leave," Mr. Rogers said.
The spokesman said the Ukraine lobbying activities weren't relevant to the campaign. "There has been no greater enemy of the status quo and corrupt lobbying practices in Washington than John McCain," he said.
Working for foreign interests is legal, but it can be politically hazardous for lobbyists and the politicians they advise. The issue is becoming harder for politicians to avoid because globalization has made such work lucrative, drawing some of Washington's best political talent.
Some of the best-paying but most-controversial contracts in Washington involve companies and individuals allied with the Kremlin. In addition to its work for the Party of Regions, the Davis Manafort lobbying firm has pursued business deals with Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska, the Washington Post reported in January. In 2006, Mr. Davis introduced Mr. McCain to Mr. Deripaska, a supporter and confidant of Mr. Putin, according to the Post.
The Wall Street Journal reported last year that Mr. Deripaska has been barred from the U.S. for allegedly lying to the FBI about his involvement with organized crime.
Details of Davis Manafort's Ukraine work were contained in a late January filing with the Justice Department. According to those documents, Daniel J. Edelman Inc., parent of the prominent Edelman public-relations firm, was paid $35,000 a month last year to promote the Party of Regions by Davis Manafort International LLC, a Delaware corporation set up in March 2007.
"Davis Manafort International LLC is directed by a foreign political party, the Ukraine Parties [sic] of Regions, to consult on the political campaign in Ukraine," the filing states.
Chris Deri, an Edelman employee who worked on the contract, said its work took place in the summer and fall of 2007 and was "almost entirely focused on U.S. media."
Mr. Manafort didn't respond to emailed questions. An aide said he was unavailable.
The Party of Regions is based in Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine. In Ukraine's presidential election in 2004, Mr. Putin campaigned for the party's leader, Viktor Yanukovich. Reports of intimidation and other voting irregularities led to massive street protests. Ukraine's top court ordered a new election, which was won by pro-Western candidate Viktor Yushchenko.
In recent years, the Party of Regions has moderated some of its pro-Russian positions and moved closer to the West, supporting Ukrainian membership in the European Union.
There is other evidence the firm has had ties to the Ukrainian party. When Mr. Yanukovich, the prime minister at the time, came to Washington in 2006, Mr. Manafort accompanied him at a breakfast for journalists at the Willard Hotel, Serhiy Kudelia, a Ukrainian journalist, said in an interview last year.
When Mr. Yanukovich spoke at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank in Washington, Mr. Manafort was in his entourage, according to Steven Pifer, the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine.
The previously-undisclosed Jan. 28 filing shows that the Edelman firm was hired by Davis Manafort to work on influencing public opinion in the United States. The effort was aimed at "select top-tier media in the U.S.," as well as "experts and analysts focused on the former Soviet Union," the Edelman filing states.
U.S. law generally requires Washington consultants to register with Congress or the Justice Department when they take on foreign clients who have dealings with the government or are seeking to influence public opinion. But many lobbyists and consultants in Washington seek to avoid controversy over their foreign clients by not registering, citing a variety of loopholes such as exemptions for legal work.
Davis Manafort hasn't registered as a foreign agent.