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  • Site says police, army may remain mainly neutral in Ukrainian electi

    Site says police, army may remain mainly neutral in Ukrainian election

    Glavred, Kiev
    16 Nov 04

    It is by no means certain that the army, security service and police
    force, (referred to collectively as the "armed services") will actually
    carry out the orders reportedly given to them to do everything
    possible to secure the victory of the establishment candidate in
    Sunday's presidential election, a Ukrainian web site has said. It
    said some senior officers want Yanukovych to win, while others are
    not very concerned as they will be dismissed anyway. This indifference
    extends downwards, resulting at best in a patchy response to partisan
    orders, it said. The net result may be that the armed services will
    prove to be largely neutral, it concluded. The following is the text
    of the article by Viktor Shlynchak posted on the opposition-leaning
    Ukrainian web site Glavred on 16 November under the title "Powerless?";
    subheadings have been inserted editorially:

    The situation in the Ukrainian armed forces, the SBU Security
    Service of Ukraine and the Interior Ministry shows that today the
    lower subdivisions of the armed-service departments are minded to
    "wait and see which way the wind blows" and to refrain from taking
    radical action against the opposition - until the terrain has been
    finally reconnoitred. In other words, until the winner has been
    declared. Armed services' loyalties are uncertain

    We have reported on more than one occasion that something akin
    to an internal revolt is simmering deep inside the armed-service
    departments. We have also reported that each of the teams of the
    presidential candidates has tried all means of gaining the support
    of the armed services - both public means and those that are behind
    the scenes. Opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko has read out appeals
    to law-enforcement officers.

    Prime Minister and establishment candidate Viktor Yanukovych has
    promised district police inspectors a pay rise and a "topping up" of
    their length of service. Yushchenko has had meetings with the heads
    of the armed-service departments and appealed to their consciences.

    Yanukovych has brought pressure to bear through administrative
    methods, strengthening Kiev with military units. Neither Yushchenko
    nor Yanukovych is convinced that, in a state of emergency, he will
    have the support of the armed services, just as neither is convinced
    that he will not be betrayed at the very last moment. Yushchenko has
    nothing in particular to hope for, whereas for Yanukovych it may mean
    unconditional surrender.

    Defence minister's indifference prompts army neutrality

    At the moment, Yanukovych can only rely on the Defence
    Ministry. Oleksandr Kuzmuk, a member of the establishment candidate's
    team who has just taken over the ministry after heading it previously,
    has a pretty good idea of what is what in the institution entrusted to
    him. However, sources inside the ministry say that Kuzmuk, appointed
    two months ago, spends most of his time on preserving his influence
    in the ministry after the election, whatever the final outcome
    is. This process includes the gradual placing of "his own people",
    the formation of a balance among the generals and also the commonplace
    accumulation of money in the accounts of commercial bodies that work
    with the Defence Ministry.

    We shall not represent this claim as being the truth, but rumours to
    the effect that Kuzmuk is least of all concerned about the election
    have long and persistently been in circulation. Kuzmuk's closest
    associates are not certain that, even if Yanukovych comes to power,
    Gen Kuzmuk will remain in his post, since the post has reportedly
    been promised to a USDPU United Social Democratic Party of Ukraine
    protege. Hence his attitude towards his area of responsibility.
    Kuzmuk's mood inevitably affects not only the calculations
    being made by the generals, but also the views of lower-ranking
    officers. Campaigning for Yanukovych in the army boils down to a
    reminder that Yushchenko "took benefits away", while Yanukovych has
    promised to restore them. However, even those for whom this argument
    seemed previously to be the most convincing are not very sure that
    the income part of family budgets in the army will increase. That
    is why they still retain a relatively neutral attitude towards the
    two candidates. Commanders of units are, of course, able to bypass
    the law on elections and to control the course of the voting at the
    polling stations within military units, yet the degree of loyalty
    to the current authorities in the armed forces does not allow one to
    say that it is very high.

    Quite interesting processes are also taking place in the army itself,
    and they are setting the other armed services against Kuzmuk. The
    present defence minister's attempts to attach to the Defence
    Ministry the SBU's department of military counterintelligence (the
    DVKR), which has been resurrected, in the full sense of the term,
    would seem to be prompted by dissatisfaction with the keenness of
    the counterintelligence officers and by reluctance to contemplate
    an independent body that has every opportunity to monitor the
    army. Incidentally, so far, this body has already "dug up" a mass of
    material on the abuses, intrigues and unscrupulousness of top officers
    in the Defence Ministry. The "bargaining" over such matters is not
    only becoming a stumbling block between the armed services, but is
    also generating tension between individual subunits, including those
    that are to ensure order on polling day, 21 November, and possibly
    after the result has been announced.

    SBU also standing on the sidelines

    The SBU is also avoiding active participation in the elections in the
    run-up to the second round. The available data suggest that the secret
    service has withdrawn from playing an active role in the election,
    and extensive reports from the "electoral fields" have stopped
    thudding on to the desks of senior state officials. Operational
    information from the regions, particularly those in the west, has
    also dried up. Can these developments be logged as achievements by
    the opposition candidate's team? That is dubious. It is more likely
    that SBU chief Ihor Smeshko stood up to the president and defended his
    right to take no part in electoral games, regardless of the dismissal
    looming over him, for which forces close to the Party of Regions led by
    Yanukovych are pressing. After the election, Smeshko will, in any case,
    have to collect his belongings and go. If Yanukovych comes to power,
    Smeshko will probably be replaced by his former first deputy in the
    SBU, Yuriy Zemlyanskyy, whom Smeshko himself fired not so long ago
    on 20 August , incidentally. Zemlyanskyy not only hails from Donetsk
    Region like Yanukovych , but he is also one of the people through whom
    Yanukovych resolved the lion's share of his affairs in Kiev while he
    was still governor of Donetsk Region .

    The fact, however, that Zemlyanskyy spent a lengthy period inside
    the building in Volodymyrska Street, Kiev - SBU headquarters does
    not mean that his authority is very strong and firm. He has far more
    enemies than friends in the head office. Members of the secret service
    themselves say that people in the building remember Volodymyr Radchenko
    (now secretary of the National Security and Defence Council) more than
    Gen Zemlyanskyy, even though Radchenko moved to other work before he
    did. Volodymyr Satsyuk, the man in the SBU with responsibility for the
    elections, has recently lost any special interest in these measures,
    evidently because he has not found anything in a Yanukovych victory
    that would be at all beneficial to himself.

    Police also wobble

    The only question now unanswered is how the police will behave if the
    crunch comes. The obsessive determination of Interior Minister Mykola
    Bilokon during the presidential campaign would be surprising if one
    did not know what specifically Yanukovych had promised the general in
    his office. He is said to have promised a great deal. Much depends,
    however, not so much on Bilokon himself as on how he is perceived
    by the actual Interior Ministry staff. There are constant whispers
    in the central directorate about the blackmail and threats that are
    levelled against the relatives of internal affairs officers who,
    in the opinion of the minister's associates, are lukewarm in helping
    "Yanukovych's headquarters carry out election work". It is also known
    that some of the ministry's orders are given verbally, so as to avoid
    liability if Yushchenko wins. A resolution to that effect was adopted
    the week before last. Most orders are now conveyed using the secure
    communications systems.

    The fact that information leaks about the actions of senior police
    officers surface in the media proves that there is a certain number
    of staff in the law-enforcement agencies who are willing to engage in
    dialogue with the opposition candidate's headquarters. It is rumoured
    that among such people is former Interior Minister Yuriy Kravchenko,
    who occasionally meets representatives of Yushchenko's headquarters
    and offers them help. It is hard to judge how honest that desire is. It
    should also be recalled that the text of an appeal to speaker Volodymyr
    Lytvyn from law-enforcement officers in the Kharkiv area was published
    not so long ago by Vecherniye Vesti on 10 November . The letter
    referred to falsification of the election and how Interior Ministry
    staff were involved in this. Admittedly, Deputy Interior Minister
    Mykhaylo Korniyenko said later, in a Glavred interview, that "the
    letter is an election stunt" and does not actually exist. According
    to our information, the police "whistleblowers" immediately decided
    to hold a news conference, but cancelled it at the last moment.
    Another report appeared on Internet sites later, saying that Deputy
    Minister Mykola Lyubar had instructed his subordinates in the office
    of the governor of Cherkasy Region: "if Yanukovych doesn't get 50 per
    cent of votes, it is essential to put into effect the plan to disrupt
    the election so that they are deemed to be invalid". Can this statement
    be regarded as a verbal order? In view of the minister's directive,
    it probably can.

    Twilight of Kuchma era recalls Ceausescu scenario

    However, the main question remains open: how are such initiatives seen
    locally? Our information suggests that responses vary quite a lot. Even
    the actual posing of the question means that the authorities, who
    wanted to look "as strong as never before" and whose administrative
    resources relied primarily on the armed services, are starting to
    lose their power as the end of the election draws near.

    The present situation in Ukraine reminds one of Romania in the
    final hours of Ceausescu, when all the armed services turned against
    him towards the end of the uprising. It reminds one of Russia, when
    Yeltsin's words were stronger than the tanks. It reminds one of Armenia
    and the Georgia of recent times. And, even if, in some unexpected
    circumstances, Kuzmuk, Smeshko and Bilokon repeat the words of the
    Romanian general Vasile Milea the defence minister, who refused to
    carry out Ceausescu's orders: "I looked in all the service regulations
    and could not find anywhere a paragraph that said that the people's
    army should fire on the people... ellipsis as published ", events
    will not, we hope, lead to shooting in Ukraine. We very much hope not.
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