BY
How
can one explain the contradictory picture of today’s Ukraine — a country whose
government has loudly announced a reform agenda, yet whose reformers are
currently leaving this very same government?
Kiev
can boast its first successes in implementing the wide-ranging reform agenda it
adopted in July 2014. A number of consequential laws have been passed: on lustration,
fighting corruption, procurement, restructuring the civil service, modernizing
higher education, creating a new police force, introducing public broadcasting,
and so on. Four new anti-corruption agencies are being established.
Still
other reforms are taking place on the local level. Many regions, cities, and
even villages are changing their public administration for the better, either
in cooperation with Kiev or independently. In a number of regional governments,
like Odessa, the local changes even go beyond the reforms conducted in the
capital.
And
yet, despite these signs of progress, Ukraine is in the midst of a political
crisis. There is clear evidence of a deepening
schism within the ruling elite. After growing criticisms of the country’s
lagging reform effort by foreign and domestic observers over the preceding months,
Ukraine’s respected Economy Minister, Aivaras Abromavicius, stepped down on
February 3, triggering an earthquake within the political class. Abromavicius
made it clear that his resignation was a protest against pressure on his office
by corrupt interests, and his action brought the growing frustration of the
country’s reformist officials out into the open.
It’s
not just that the promises of quick and comprehensive reforms made after the
Euromaidan revolution have yet to be fulfilled. As Abromavicius made clear, the
old kickback system and state-business networks are reasserting themselves
under new guises. Ironically, this is happening despite the anti-oligarchic
furor of the Euromaidan revolution and the stated reformist agenda of the new
government. For all their energy and activism, a mobilized civil society sector
and an engaged Western diaspora have failed to thwart the resistance of the old
guard.
The
standard explanation for this seeming contradiction, while it contains a large
degree of truth, is incomplete: Ukraine’s post-Soviet corruption networks are
fighting back, old habits and structures have survived, and Kiev’s new
political leadership is clearly not as transformational as the 2014
revolutionaries thought. But why haven’t the Euromaidan’s reformist crusaders
been able to overcome the old oligarchic system? Three main reasons for this
failure stand out — and they can all be traced to the Kremlin.
First,
there is the brutal fact of Russian military aggression. Moscow’s offensive in
the country’s South and East has not only damaged Ukraine’s territorial
integrity, but has also profoundly affected many other aspects of society,
including its capacity for radical change. Thousands of Ukrainians — among them
many selfless patriots — have been killed, mutilated, wounded, or traumatized
by the fighting. The country lost two economically important territories, the
Crimean peninsula and much of the Don Basin (Donbas). Ukraine has had to
redirect large portions of its already scarce financial, material, and human
resources from civilian to military sectors as well to post-war restoration.
The
war and various related challenges have had serious repercussions for Ukraine’s
civil society and its diaspora in the West. Tens of thousands of activists
mobilized by the revolution could no longer concentrate their efforts on
transforming the country. Instead, they had to refocus on its very survival.
Rather than separating the government from the oligarch class, or demolishing
the old state apparatus, the top priority was to ensure that everyone — no
matter how unsavory — would stay in the fight against the Russians.
For
instance, in the summer of 2014, one of Ukraine’s most notorious industry
magnates, Ihor Kolomoyskiy, played a crucial role in keeping the Kremlin-inspired
pro-Russian separatism in the Don Basin from spreading into the strategically
important Dnipropetrovsk region. Little wonder that today he remains one of the
country’s most important power-brokers.
Even
as the fighting ebbed, further daunting challenges, both for Ukraine’s
government and for its civil society, came to the fore. The country had to
focus on alleviating the physical and psychological suffering of thousands
of soldiers and civilians directly affected by the fighting, as well as figuring
out how to take care of hundreds of thousands of displaced people from the
affected territories.
Over
the past two years, Ukraine’s civil society should have been concentrating on
tasks like improving legislative projects, promoting international economic
ties, uncovering corruption networks, developing education programs,
identifying wasteful spending, or coming to terms with difficult historical
issues. Instead, most of the activists mobilized in the winter of 2013-14 have
since been engaged in work tied to the war and its various repercussions on
society.
The
second major impediment to reform was the country’s economic crisis. Mainly but
not exclusively as a result of the war, Ukraine’s GDP collapsed in 2014-15,
taking the national currency with it. Real wages plummeted as well, by over 13 percent in
2014, and by another 10 percent in 2015.
Ukrainians
have also faced sharp increases in energy costs — a condition imposed by
the International Monetary Fund before it would agree to disburse its
multi-billion standby loans. To be sure, these painful measures are long
overdue. But this drastic macroeconomic adjustment during wartime further
exacerbated the shock of the country’s already severe financial and social
problems.
The
resulting surge in utility costs and consumer goods prices have not only
reduced private consumption, investment, and comfort. They have also reduced
the living standards of civic activists, reduced popular support for the
government’s Westernization agenda, and facilitated the rise of irresponsible
political populism. As impoverished anti-corruption campaigners became
preoccupied with securing the daily survival of their families, the relative
freedom of action of their super-rich enemies in industry, mass media,
parliament, and government accordingly increased.
Finally,
Ukraine’s ability to reform has been seriously damaged by Russia’s general
campaign of subversion. The more traditional aspects of Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine have been accompanied by a wide gamut of unconventional “hybrid war”
elements, including non-military economic, social, psychological, political,
and other measures that are only partially visible to western policymakers and
publics. These include trade sanctions, secret intelligence operations,
international propaganda campaigns, cyber-attacks, diplomatic skirmishes,
clustering of troops on the Russian-Ukrainian border, and so on.
The
aim of the latter element — the staging of large-scale army exercises and
movements of ground forces — is not only to train and prepare Russian soldiers
for a possible future attack on Ukraine. Of more immediate concern is the
anxiety the maneuvers create within Ukraine and among its partners. Like
the enormous amounts of heavy weapons with which Moscow has armed its puppet
regimes in the Donbas, the army drills near the border are designed to keep
everyone guessing.
Could Russia’s mobilized troops attack Ukraine now? Or is
the Kremlin preparing an offensive operation in the future? Or is Moscow merely
playing with Kiev’s nerves and trying to provoke radical Ukrainian forces? Will
a full-scale war between Russia and Ukraine happen soon, or later, or never?
Perhaps
the most important aspect of the Kremlin’s non-linear warfare is thus not its
immediate effect on Ukrainian society. What may be more important
are its psychological effects. Ukrainians are worn down from
being held, for years, in a state of suspense — stuck between calm and
tension, between war and peace, between insecurity and stability. This applies
in particular to those parts of Ukraine where Russian-speakers predominate.
Moscow’s subversive actions aim to discourage entrepreneurs, disillusion
university graduates, unsettle civil society activists, spook international
partners, and scare off foreign investors.
Obviously,
neither Russian aggression nor economic difficulties should excuse the Ukraine
government’s slow pace of reforms. Ukraine’s friends should continue to press
Kiev hard for cleaner government and deeper economic reform. But the West
should recognize that the country’s exhausted civil society and its beleaguered
administration are operating in an environment of exceptional stress and myriad
distractions. Western leaders and policymakers must thus maintain the pressure
on Moscow to abandon its reckless hybrid war. Had Russia respected the
sovereignty, integrity, and European choice of its “brother nation,” we would,
already today, have a very different Ukraine.
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