Yuliaphobia:
Why Does President Want to Push Nation off Cliff?
By Taras Kuzio (Kyiv
Post)
Yulia Tymoshenko and her BYuT bloc, the Party of Regions,
Communists and Volodymyr Lytvyn do not want elections. Neither do 72 percent of
Ukrainians. Only President Victor Yushchenko does. The question is why?
Another pre-term election would be bad for
Ukraine’s economy, bad for Ukraine’s entry into NATO (an election would be held
at the same time as the December NATO review meeting), even worse for
Yushchenko’s popularity and could be disastrous for his Our Ukraine-People’s
Self Defence bloc (which might not make it into parliament).
Western banks and financial institutions, such as
Royal Bank of
“Obviously early elections are the worst-case
scenario, as given the challenges,
“As long as the atmosphere remains politicized,
there will be little room for consensus policy-making on key issues including
any passage of further anti-inflation measures, privatization, or adjustment of
debt issuance plans’ and ‘However, internal problems, namely political
instability and worsening macroeconomic fundamentals, aggra-vated by global
financial turmoil, create substantial difficulties in attraction of
international capital.”
The president is increasingly acting irrationally.
Going into elections when both he and Our Ukraine-Peoples Self-Defence have
only 5 percent support is acting like a kamikaze pilot.
So what is Bankova’s game plan?
Yushchenko wants to remove Tymoshenko at all
costs. Lets be frank – he intensely dislikes her. In a Channel 5 interview this
week Tymoshenko admitted that she had not had a face to face meeting with
Yushchenko in years.
Yushchenko wants to install a new technocratic
Prime Minister (possibly Yekhanurov or Arseniuk) through a grand coalition. After
the 2006 Elections, Yekhanurov negotiated a grand coalition with the Party of
Regions where they agreed he would remain Prime Minister.
The grand coalition would also back Yushchenko’s
candidacy in the presidential elections. The Akhmetov wing of the Party of
Regions would financially support such a coalition and Yushchenko’s candidacy.
Tymoshenko has been undertaking negotiations with Our Ukraine-People’s Self
Defence and Lytvyn for a new enlarged coalition. Half of Our Ukraine-People’s
Self Defence wants to join while the other half is being ordered by Bankova not
to.
In publicly conducting negotiations on an
Yushchenko’s irrationality in lurching