Ukraine (Borderland) ©2014 Dr. Zoltan Grossman, The Evergreen State College Ivan’s border changes Born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire (before WWI) Grew up in Czechoslovakia (after WWI) Fought in Hungary (during WWII) Grew old in the Soviet Union (after WWII) Died in Ukraine (after 1991) All without leaving his hometown of Mukachevo, in Transcarpathia (Western Ukraine) Ivan in AustriaHungary I Ivan in Czechoslovakia I Ivan in Hungary xxxxxxx xxxx I Ivan in the Soviet Union I Poor Ivan in Ukraine I European empires, 1914 German, Austro-Hungarian empires, Poland in west Russian, Ottoman empires in east Poland European religions Catholic in Southwest/Central Protestant in Northwest Orthodox in East/Southeast Muslim in part of Southeast Different religions & level of development as legacies of empires European Union “Push” of USSR, “Pull” of EU Better-off first to revolt Soviet empire extended too far into Catholic/Protestant West, just as Napoleon & Hitler lost after crossing into Orthodox East Poland, Hungary pull out of Warsaw Pact Baltic States from USSR Better off first to secede to guard status: Slovenia, Croatia from Yugoslavia Czech Rep. from Czechoslovakia A “Blue Curtain”? Eastern Europe as a “Mexico” for West? Less developed economy; Reserve for labor? Hungarian border towers moved from Austria to Romania A “Blue Curtain”? Catholic/Protestant West Orthodox/Muslim East Will Orthodox/Muslim be welcome in EU “club”? Greece in EU but foreign/ econ policies unwelcome; Romania/Bulgaria not fully welcomed Religious minorities Orthodox stuck in West: Serbs in Croatia (expelled) Russians in Kaliningrad Russians in Baltic States Religious minorities Catholics stuck in East: Croats in Bosnia Hungarians in Romania Poles in Ukraine/Belarus “Uniates” in western Ukraine Also Lutheran Karelian Finns in Russia Remnant Boundaries: Poland’s 2007 Parliamentary Election Civic Platform (PO) Free market economics/ Socially liberal Law & Justice (PiS) Economic populist/ Socially conservative Left & Democrats (LiD) Capitalist/Populist/ Socially liberal German Empire Russian Empire Remnant Boundaries: Ukraine’s 2004 Elections Yushchenko Yanukovych Which Viktor? First runoff, November 21 First runoff, November 21 49.4% 46.7% Evidence of electoral fraud in first runoff, November 21 Fears of ethnic division Ukrainians in west, north Russians in red in east, south Many Ukrainians prefer Russian President Yanukovych meets Russian President Putin November 21 runoff election 49.4% 46.7% The “Orange Revolution” http://orangeukraine.squarespace.com Tent City in Kiev Thousands of Yushchenko supporters camp out in Independence Square to back new election “Clean Ukraine” Yushchenko backers against corruption, lean West to EU Yushchenko supporters converge in Kiev Donetsk region (coal & Russians) threatens self-rule if Yushchenko takes power Democracy protests grow Serbia & Georgia turned back electoral fraud (attempt in Belarus) West criticizes Russian interference; Russia criticizes Western aid Flags of Ukraine, Georgia, Belarus etc. Not all protesters were for democracy Ukrainian nationalists in UNA-UNSO (fascist/antiSemitic party) backed Revolution as stand against Russians. Led to Svoboda (fascist) party, Pravy Sektor (Nazis) Lampoons of President Kuchma & Yanukovych Kuchma began to withdraw support for his Prime Minister SBU (ex-KGB) warns Tent City of Interior Ministry assault Supreme Court orders new runoff Yanukovych wins First Runoff, November 21 49.4% 46.7% Yushchenko wins Second Runoff, December 26 44% 52% Yushchenko Becomes President, Jan. 2005 Calls for EU membership, Iraq pullout Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko later becomes rival Independence Square in Kiev “Color Revolutions” Home-grown or Western-inspired or both? “Democratic” oppositions turn out to be nationalist, provoke revolt among ethnic minorities 2006 Parliamentary Election 2010 Presidential Election Viktor Yanukovych 49.0% Yulia Tymoshenko 45.5% Tymoshenko Yanukovych Both Yanukovych and Tymoshenko heavily involved in gas industry. Yanukovych consolidates power, takes Ukraine closer to Russia. His corruption alienates even his eastern industrial oligarch allies and Moscow. Limitations of civil liberties fuels the growth of opposition, and Ukrainian nationalism, particularly in West. Police brutality a bigger motivator than pro-EU sentiment xxxxxx Ukrainian Insurgent Army Collaborated with 1941 Nazi invasion; Massacred Jews, 50,000 Poles Ukrainian Insurgent Army Galician Division of Waffen SS Svoboda protests against bilingualism, 2012 Kiev march for Stepan Bandera’s birthday, January 2014 Maidan protests against Yanukovych, 2014 30% of protesters were fascist or Nazi (Anti-Fascist Action Ukraine) which means 70% are NOT (incl. leftists, ecologists, Jews, minorities) xxxxxx Yanukovych and Ukrainian ultraright nationalists fed off each other, and needed each other for legitimacy. Russian propaganda falsely asserts all protesters were fascists. But it is also false that the presence of fascists is Russian propaganda. Svoboda (Freedom) Wolfsangel (SS) White Power Svoboda militia fighters in Maidan Svoboda takeover of city halls Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok Alliance of European Nationalist Movements (anti-EU parties in European Parliament) Svoboda has Observer status Pravy Sektor (Right Sector) Against the Regime and [EU] Integration Pravy Sektor xxxxxx 14 + 88 88 = HH = Heil Hitler 14 Words = "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.” —U.S. terrorist David Lane, The Order Opposition leaders now running government Vitaly Klitschko (Boxer mistrusted by U.S.) Oleh Tyahnybok (Svoboda) Victoria Nuland (State Dept official’s bugged conversation released) Arseniy Yatsenyuk (Premier backed by Tymoshenko, U.S.) Svoboda now has Vice Premier, two ministries, more than any other far-right party in Europe xxxxxx Removal of Soviet soldier statues New parliament reverses bilingualism law Ukrain Ukrainian Russian RUSSIANS OUTSIDE RUSSIA Fears that Russian ethnic territoriality would turn irredentist 25 million people (17% of all Russians) Russians in Ukraine • 22% of population (up from 10% in 1926) Russians in lighter green in east, south • Concentrated in cities east of Dnieper River (Donbass industrial region) • Also on Crimean Peninsula in Black Sea • Ukraine, Russia mutually dependent Russians in Crimea (Ukraine) • Crimea former homeland of Crimean Tatars (300,000 removed by Stalin), returning since 1991 • Was part of RSFSR; given to Ukrainian SSR as Khrushchev’s 1954 birthday present • Russians 58%, Ukrainians 24%, Tatars 12% (2001) Kievan Rus’, 11th century (Origin of Russia was in modern Ukraine) Crimean Khanate & Russia, 1750-1800 Simferopol parliament Crimea Russians elected separatist leader 1994; Removed by Kiev Resolved crisis over split of Black Sea Fleet between Russia and Ukraine Reconciliation 1997-2000 Russian passport distributed 2008-09 Night Wolves block highways (Russian Pro-Putin biker gang) Crimea Extremists from both sides reinforce each other…. Stand-off in Crimea Ukrainians Russians Syria Syrian democratic opposition caught between Al Assad and Al Qaeda Libya Qaddafi forces Libyan Islamic Fighting Group Afghanistan Taliban Northern Alliance mujahedin Yugoslavia Serbian militia Croatian militia Ukraine: “Two wrongs don’t make a right” & “The enemy of your enemy is not always your friend” Yanukovych’s Berkut riot police Ukrainian militia