The outcome of the Ukrainian presidential elections could dramatically increase Moscow's influence in Eurasia. If former Prime Minister Victor Yanukovich (the Kremlin's preferred candidate) is elected, the Kremlin would virtually control the Ukrainian presidency. That would allow Russia to exercise greater geopolitical influence in Ukraine and would increase Moscow's political momentum in the rest of Eurasia.
The biggest challenges for the U.S. are to keep Russia in the anti-terrorism coalition and to ensure continued access to Russian energy resources, while supporting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all post-Soviet states. To these ends, the U.S. should boost cooperation with these countries and expand the dialogue with Moscow about contentious issues, such as South Ossetia and Abkhazia and the U.S. presence in Central Asia. In Ukraine, the Bush Administration should assist Ukrainian groups that are committed to democracy, free markets, and Euro-Atlantic integration by providing diplomatic, financial, and media support.
The First
Round
According to the government-controlled Central Electoral
Commission, Yanukovich received 40.12 percent of the vote in the
first round of the presidential election. Opposition leader Victor
Yushchenko received 39.15 percent. However, European observers and
independent pollsters gave the victory to Yushchenko by 4 percent
to 6 percent. Widespread election fraud and Yushchenko's lack of
access to the government-controlled media could also give
Yanukovich a "win" in the run-off election on November 21.
The U.S. has a strategic interest in preserving Ukraine's sovereignty and keeping the democratic process on track, while preventing Russian influence from growing further. The U.S. has warned that it may impose selective visa bans on Ukrainian officials involved in election fraud, but this may not prevent fraud in the run-off.
Russia's
Ascendancy
The Soviet-educated Russian elite, which generally views
the U.S. as a strategic adversary, may challenge the sovereignty of
or pursue increased control over the post-Soviet states by overtly
supporting pro-Moscow candidates. In the process, undermine
long-term U.S. interests in developing democratic, globally
integrated states in Eurasia.
There are two reasons for the Kremlin's ascendancy in Ukraine. First, according to published accounts in Moscow and Kiev, the Kremlin has poured unprecedented resources into the election campaign--at least $200 million from sympathetic Russian and Ukrainian businessmen. Second, Russia has access to the Soviet-era criminal files of Yanukovich, who was jailed twice for aggravated assault and robbery. According to Moscow experts, Yanukovich's criminal past creates a relationship of a case officer and an "asset" between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Yanukovich.
Ukraine's
Significance
Ukraine should be viewed in the larger context of the
recent negative regional dynamics. Before the elections, at
Moscow's request, President Leonid Kuchma and Yanukovich engineered
changes in Ukraine's military doctrine and turned away from NATO
and EU integration. On October 17, Belarussian President Alexander
Lukashenka pulled off an unconstitutional power grab in Belarus.
The stalemate in Moldova about the secessionist Transdniestr region
continues. In the Caucasus, Moscow is undermining Georgian
independence by creeping annexation of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia.
Ukraine is crucial to the Kremlin because it is a large-scale demonstration that Russia can reestablish influence in the former empire and expand its access to the Black Sea and Southeastern Europe, including the Balkans. Russia has deliberately focused on detaching Ukraine from its Western ties and making it dependent on Moscow.
Implications for
Eurasia
If Russia successfully consolidates control over Belarus
and Ukraine while derailing a peaceful resolution in Moldova,
Moscow may also be encouraged to pursue greater control over
Caspian oil. It could do so by increasing pressure on Kazakhstan,
possibly through its Russian-speaking minority, and it could
eventually move to secure Azerbaijan's compliance with the Kremlin
regional policy.
Moscow has also utilized secessionist enclaves to advance its "near abroad" policy. Beyond that, it may further undermine pro-American Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili and pressure Uzbekistan to return to the Russia-led bloc. However, as the Beslan tragedy demonstrated, Russian military power is still limited in its ability to counter real security threats. Such ambitious policy may stoke imperial hubris in Russia--with unpredictable consequences.
What the Bush
Administration Should Do
The biggest U.S. challenges are to keep Russia in the
anti-terrorism coalition and to ensure access to Russian energy
resources, while keeping the former Soviet republics sovereign and
independent. Furthermore, the tools in the U.S. diplomatic toolbox
are limited. Russia is flush with oil revenue and no longer needs
Western economic assistance, and it can easily obtain the financing
and needed advanced technology for oil exploration on the open
market. In this context, the Bush Administration should:
- Support Ukrainian groups that are committed to democracy, free markets, and Euro-Atlantic integration by providing diplomatic, financial, and media support.
- Support sovereignty and territorial integrity of all post-Soviet states by expanding cooperation via NATO's Partnership for Peace, bilateral military-to-military ties, exchanges, train-and-equip programs, and even limited troop deployment where necessary.
- Expand high-level diplomatic dialogue with Moscow about contentious issues, such as South Ossetia and Abkhazia and the U.S. presence in Central Asia.
Conclusions
Recent developments in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle
East will require the President's attention and will likely limit
American freedom of maneuver in Eurasia. The muted U.S. responses
to recent power shifts in Ukraine and Belarus demonstrate that the
U.S. is unwilling to challenge Moscow's growing influence. However,
the long-term geopolitical outcome in Eurasia will depend on
Washington's engagement in the region, on Russia and the U.S
agreeing on the "traffic rules" in Eurasia, and on Moscow
abandoning its anti-American policy in and beyond the territory of
the former Soviet Union.
Ariel Cohen, Ph.D., is Research Fellow in Russian and Eurasian Studies in the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies at The Heritage Foundation.