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Diversity Is Strength! It's Also…Ukraine's Troubled Election
Viktor Yanukovych's victory in the February 7
Ukrainian presidential elections is the final nail in
the coffin of the color-coded revolutions so
beloved by the Western foreign policy establishment.
Seems like the West's
Orange fever is slowly ebbing out and a more
realistic assessment of Ukrainian politics is setting
in.
Which is a good thing. America and other Western
countries should study Ukraine's situation to learn what
ethnic, linguistic, and cultural fragmentation (a.k.a.
"diversity")
does to a society—and why it should not be imported.
Even the Eurocrats of the
OSCE accepted the verdict and characterized the
elections as
"open" and fair. The Orange coalition of the
defeated President
Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister
Yulia Tymoshenko was politically bankrupt.
Yushchenko finished with a popularity rating of about
10%.
The reason for Ukraine's split into the Orange
(Yushchenko/ Tymoshenko) and Blue (Yanukovych
supporters) camps is not ideological. Ukraine is deeply
fragmented along
ethno-cultural,
linguistic, and economic lines.[In Wikipedia's map,
the Orange Party is colored yellow]

Ukraine consists of three parts:
- the West;
- the East, and
- the Crimean Peninsula.
All of these areas are very distinct from one another.
The difference is especially stark between West Ukraine
and the Crimea.
Western Ukraine, especially the area around
Lviv, is
the Yushchenko/Tymoshenko Orange heartland.
This part of Ukraine was part of the Austrian-ruled
Kingdom of Galicia and then
Poland, joining with the other parts of Ukraine only
after World War II. Almost everybody there speaks
Ukrainian as their native language and non-Ukrainians
are few in number.
West Ukrainians are either
Uniate (Greek Catholic) or
Ukrainian Orthodox with pockets of Baptists
and
other small Protestant congregations. In contrast,
East Ukrainians are also
Orthodox but part of the Moscow Patriarchate. The
West is rural and parochial. There is little industry
and wages in
Galicia and
Volhynia
are a fraction of industrial East Ukraine's. Thousands
of West Ukrainians travel to Poland and the Czech
Republic to work.
West Ukraine has been the source of strident and often
bloody nationalism and ethnic strife. During World War
II, Ukrainian nationalists from the OUN and UPA
organizations
collaborated with the Nazis and massacred Jews and Poles.
The leadership of these organizations and most of the
members came from Galicia and had previously engaged in
anti-Polish terrorism. A Ukrainian SS division and two
Ukrainian
Wehrmacht battalions were established by Hitler:
SS-Galizien,
Nachtigall, and
Roland. Ukrainian nationalists, including members of
the Nachtigall, massacred tens of thousands of Jews,
Poles, and Ukrainians
suspected of pro-Soviet sympathies in Lviv and other
towns and villages in Ukraine.
Oftentimes, the Jews in Ukrainian villages were murdered
by Ukrainian nationalists even before the Nazi
Einsatzgruppen
arrived. (My great-great-grandmother was murdered by
Ukrainian collaborationists in Volhynia). The
Nazis themselves were horrified at the barbaric
cruelty and the insubordination of their Galician
cohorts. In the later part of the World War II,
Ukrainian nationalists massacred as many as
three hundred thousand Polish civilians in Western
Ukraine in a mostly successful attempt to make West
Ukraine ethnically homogenous.
Yushchenko and Tymoshenko draw a large part of their
support from the ideological heirs of the OUN and UPA.
The commander of the Nachtigall, Roman Shukhevych, was
posthumously
given Ukraine's highest honor in 2007.
The graves of the
OUN and UPA commanders are favorite pilgrimage spots for
West Ukrainian politicians. Anti-Semitism and
Russophobia became integral parts of West Ukrainian life
and popular culture, from
skinhead demonstrations to anti-Semitic and
Russophobic menus and signs in restaurants and cafes.
While Yushchenko and Tymoshenko prefer to portray the
more moderate nationalists from Kiev and Central Ukraine
as their power base, their strength comes from the
OUN/UPA crowd. However, Yushchenko and Tymoshenko
succeeded in fooling the European and American foreign
policy establishment by portraying themselves as
paladins of Western democracy and tolerance. What a
British journalist described as the
"druggy skinheads from Lviv" were conveniently
tucked away from the cameras of Western media.
Compared to West Ukraine, the Crimean Peninsula is
simply another country. There is nothing integrally
Ukrainian about it. Historically, the Crimea was Turkic
(Crimean
Tatar),
Pontic Greek, and Jewish (Krymchaks
and
Karaim). After the Russian Empire destroyed the
Crimean Tatar Khanate, a slave market and raiding
base for the Ottoman Empire, the Crimea became
overwhelmingly Russian. The Crimea's pleasant climate
made it a
favored holiday destination for the Russian and
later, Soviet public. Until the 1950s, Crimea was part
of Russia.
But in 1954, Khrushchev gave the Crimea to Ukraine, in
one of the worst instances of modern
"nation-building". Even under Ukrainian rule, the Crimea remained
overwhelmingly Russian. The main Soviet naval base at
Sevastopol further contributed to Crimea's place in
the Russian sphere of influence.
When the Soviet Union broke up, 93 % of Crimeans voted
to be an autonomous part of Russia. But the government
of newly-independent Ukraine ignored the referendum,
setting in motion a ticking time bomb.
Crimea was never Ukrainian and if the current
demographic trends continue or stay the same, never will
be. Also, Russia will never give up its main naval base
at
Sevastopol.
Instead of clamoring for the Crimea's forcible
Ukrainization, which will result in bloodshed, Ukrainian
nationalists should either grant it far-reaching
autonomy to diffuse the tension or let Crimeans have a
referendum on remaining in Ukraine.
Unfortunately, the Orange camp and its
allies in the West do not realize that a war between
Russia and Ukraine over Crimea will be much more bloody
than the one in
South Ossetia and will lead to the breakup of
Ukraine.
Yanukovych's power comes from the East Ukrainian
industrial, coal rich regions. While the people there
are ethnically Ukrainian, their cultural and linguistic
identity is primarily Russian. The Russian language is
widely spoken there—Yanukovych speaks better Russian
than Ukrainian—and Russo-Ukrainian tension is very rare.
For hundreds of years, East Ukrainians lived and
intermarried with Russians and see their country's
future as an alliance with Russia (both Khrushchev and
Brezhnev were eastern Ukrainians).
However, unlike Crimeans, East Ukrainians do not
consider themselves Russian. Most importantly, East
Ukraine has a much healthier economy than the rural
Western Ukraine. Yanukovych proved himself as an able
manager when he was governor of the
Donetsk region.
Ukraine is heavily dependent on Russia for oil and gas.
Therefore, Yanukovych's pro-Russian policies are not
sycophantic, but realistic. Without Russian oil and gas,
the already withered Ukrainian economy will collapse.
While making pro-Yushchenko noises, the EU did not seem
to be in a hurry to help Ukraine financially. Therefore
Ukraine has to look to the East.
Yanukovych also wants to decentralize Ukraine and give
more power to the various regions. This will reduce
tensions between the Orange and Blue regions of the
country and will allow for more effective
administration.
It's time for the West to realize that Ukraine belongs
in Russia's sphere of influence. Ukraine is closest to
Russia ethnically, religiously, and culturally. By
electing Yanukovych for the second time, Ukraine gave a
clear signal it wishes to maintain close relations with
its eastern relatives—not chase an
EU/ NATO mirage.
Above all, the West must realize the dangers
of
ethno-cultural fragmentation and artificial
nation-building by looking at Ukraine's sad example.
A coal miner from East Ukrainian Donetsk and a Uniate
priest from Lviv live in different countries. They
worship in different churches, commemorate different
heroes, and have different histories.
What is being
imported into America is even more divergent.
Eugene Girin [email him] immigrated legally from the Republic of Moldova in 1994 at the age of 10. He has been published by VDARE.COM, Front Page Magazine, and other websites.





