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EDITORIAL
The Washington Post, Washington, D.C.
Monday, January 12, 2004; Page A16
ACCORDING TO Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, the Bush administration's
first foreign policy resolution for 2004 is "to expand freedom." And not
only in Iraq and the Middle East: In an op-ed article published in the New
York Times, Mr. Powell promised to support "the consolidation of freedom in
many new but often fragile democracies . . . in Latin America, Europe, Asia
and Africa." We hope that support will extend beyond the rhetoric that too
often has substituted for genuine democratic advocacy during President
Bush's first three years -- and that it will be applied even where the
United States has interests that make toleration of autocracy tempting.
One region where such U.S. engagement, or its absence, might prove decisive
is the band of former Soviet republics to the west and south of Russia.
Several are struggling democracies; others are ruled by autocrats. Almost
all are under threat from Moscow's resurgent imperialism. As the tiny state
of Georgia recently demonstrated, democracy is the best defense against
Russian President Vladimir Putin's attempts to create a Kremlin-dominated
sphere of influence. Countries that have held free and fair elections have
tended to gravitate toward strengthening their independence and seeking good
relations with the West, while unstable autocrats are more likely to yield
to Mr. Putin.
The country closest to a tipping point may be Ukraine. Like Russia, Ukraine
has an electoral democracy tainted by corruption and strong-arm tactics and
an economy warped by clans of oligarchs. Much of its population, however,
aspires to integration with the West. President Leonid Kuchma has been
linked to corruption and serious human rights violations. In recent months
he has been moving steadily closer to Mr. Putin, allowing a Russian takeover
of much of Ukraine's energy industry and signing an economic integration
treaty.
Now Mr. Kuchma appears to be looking for ways to curtail Ukraine's democracy
so that he can prolong his own hold on power when his term expires this
year. Last month his allies in Parliament pushed through the first draft of
a constitutional amendment that would cut short the term of the president
due to be elected in October and provide that future presidents be chosen by
Parliament -- where Mr. Kuchma's forces retain control. Then the judges he
appointed to the supreme court ruled that the constitution's two-term limit
does not prevent Mr. Kuchma from serving again. The president's cronies
protest that they are only moving the country toward a more
parliament-centered system, and Mr. Kuchma coyly says he has not "yet"
decided to seek another term. But the effect of his moves would be to
neutralize the country's most popular leader, Viktor Yushchenko, who, polls
say, would win the next presidential election if it were fairly held.
More than Mr. Kuchma's quest for continued power is at stake. Mr. Yushchenko
is popular precisely because he is associated with those Ukrainians who seek
to consolidate an independent democracy and move the country toward
integration with Europe. Mr. Putin surely will be sympathetic to Mr.
Kuchma's subversion of the system. The question is whether the Bush
administration will work with Western Europe to mount an effective counter.
Freedom could be consolidated this year in Ukraine or slip away. The outcome
may just depend on how well Mr. Powell keeps his resolution.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A8655-2004Jan11.html
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