PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Ukraine
Geography
Area: 233,000 sq. mi., the largest country
wholly in Europe.
Cities: Capital--Kiev (often
transliterated as Kyiv from Ukrainian, pop. 2.8
million). Other cities--Kharkiv,
Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Odesa, Lviv.
Terrain: A vast plain mostly bounded by the
Carpathian mountains in the southwest and by the
Black Sea and the Sea of Azov in the South.
Climate: Continental temperate, except in
southern Crimea, which has a sub-tropical
climate.
People
Population (est.): 46.9 million.
Nationality: Noun--Ukrainian(s);
adjective--Ukrainian.
Ethnic groups: Ukrainians, Russians, Belarusians,
Moldovans, Hungarians, Bulgarians, Jews, Poles,
Crimean Tatars, and other groups.
Religions: Ukrainian Orthodoxy, Ukrainian Greek
Catholicism, Judaism, Roman Catholicism, Islam,
others.
Languages: Ukrainian (official), Russian,
others.
Education: Literacy--98%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--22/1,000;
life expectancy--61.6 yrs. males, 72.8
yrs. females.
Work force: 23 million. Industry and
construction--32%; agriculture and
forestry--24%; health, education, and
culture--17%; transport and communication--7%.
Government
Type: Parliamentary-presidential.
Independence: August 24, 1991.
Constitution: First post-Soviet constitution
adopted June 28, 1996, amended January 1, 2006.
Branches: Executive--president, prime
minister, cabinet. Legislative--450-member
unicameral parliament, the Supreme Rada (members
elected to 4-year terms). Judicial--Supreme
Court, Courts of Appeal, local courts, and
Constitutional Court.
Political parties: Wide range of active
political parties and blocs, from leftist to
center and center-right to ultra-nationalist.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Administrative subdivisions: 24 provinces
(oblasts), Crimean autonomous republic, and two
cities with special status--Kiev and Sevastopol.
Economy
Nominal GDP (2005 est.): $81.5 billion.
Annual growth rate (2005 gov. est.): 2.6%.
Nominal per capita GDP (2005 est.): $1739.
Natural resources: Vast fertile lands, coal,
ironstone, complex ore, various large mineral
deposits, timber.
Agriculture: Products--Grain, sugar,
sunflower seeds.
Industry: Types--Ferrous metals and
products, oil and gas transport, coke,
fertilizer, airplanes, turbines, metallurgical
equipment, diesel locomotives, tractors.
Trade (2005): Exports--$34.29 billion:
Ferrous and nonferrous metals, mineral products,
chemicals, energy transport services, machinery,
transport equipment, grain, and textiles.
Imports--$36.14 billion: Energy, mineral
fuel and oil, machinery and parts,
transportation equipment, chemicals, textiles,
and paper.
PEOPLE
The population of Ukraine is about 46.9 million.
Ethnic Ukrainians make up about 73% of the
total; ethnic Russians number about 22%, ethnic
Belarusians number about 5%. The industrial
regions in the east and southeast are the most
heavily populated, and the urban population
makes up about 67% of the population. Ukrainian
and Russian are the principal languages.
Although Russian is very widely spoken, in the
1989 census (the latest official figures) 88% of
the population identified Ukrainian as their
native language. There are also small Tatar and
Hellenic minorities centered mainly on Crimea.
The dominant religions are the Ukrainian
Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic
Church (which practices Orthodox rites but
recognizes the Roman Catholic Pope as head of
the Church). The Ukrainian Orthodox Church is
divided between a Moscow Patriarchy and a
separate Kiev Patriarchy, which was established
after Ukrainian independence and which declared
independence from Moscow. In addition to these,
there are also the Ukrainian Autocephalous
Orthodox Church and representatives of the
Russian Orthodox Church Abroad.
The birth rate of Ukraine is declining. About
70% of adult Ukrainians have a secondary or
higher education. Ukraine has about 150 colleges
and universities, of which the most important
are at Kiev, Lviv, and Kharkiv. There are about
70,000 scholars in 80 research institutes.
HISTORY
The first identifiable groups to populate what
is now Ukraine were Cimmerians, Scythians,
Sarmatians, and Goths, among other nomadic
peoples who arrived throughout the first
millennium B.C. These peoples were well known to
colonists and traders in the ancient world,
including Greeks and Romans, who established
trading outposts that eventually became
city-states. Slavic tribes occupied central and
eastern Ukraine in the sixth century A.D. and
played an important role in the establishment of
Kiev. Kievan Rus Prince Volodymyr converted the
Kievan nobility and most of the population to
Christianity in 988. Situated on lucrative trade
routes, Kiev quickly prospered as the center of
the powerful state of Kievan Rus. In the 11th
century, Kievan Rus was, geographically, the
largest state in Europe. Conflict among the
feudal lords led to decline in the 12th century.
Mongol raiders razed Kiev in the 13th century.
Most of the territory of what is modern
Ukraine was annexed by Poland and Lithuania in
the 14th century, but during that time,
Ukrainians began to conceive of themselves as a
distinct people, a feeling that survived
subsequent partitioning by greater powers over
the next centuries. Ukrainian peasants who fled
the Polish effort to force them into servitude
came to be known as Cossacks and earned a
reputation for their fierce martial spirit and
love of freedom. In 1667, Ukraine was
partitioned between Poland and Russia. In 1793,
when Poland was partitioned, much of modern-day
Ukraine was integrated into the Russian Empire.
The 19th century found the region largely
agricultural, with a few cities and centers of
trade and learning. The region was under the
control of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the
extreme west and the Russian Empire elsewhere.
Ukrainian writers and intellectuals were
inspired by the nationalistic spirit stirring
other European peoples existing under other
imperial governments and were determined to
revive Ukrainian linguistic and cultural
traditions and reestablish a Ukrainian state.
Taras Shevchenko (1814-1861), national hero of
Ukraine, presented the intellectual maturity of
the Ukrainian language and culture through his
work as a poet and artist. Imperial Russia,
however, imposed strict limits on attempts to
elevate Ukrainian culture, even banning the use
and study of the Ukrainian language.
When World War I and the Russian revolution
shattered the Habsburg and Russian empires,
Ukrainians declared independent statehood. In
1917 the Central Rada proclaimed Ukrainian
autonomy and in 1918, following the Bolshevik
seizure of power in Petrograd, the Ukrainian
National Republic declared independence under
President Mykhaylo Hrushevsky. After three years
of conflict and civil war, however, the western
part of Ukrainian territory was incorporated
into Poland, while the larger, central and
eastern regions were incorporated into the
Soviet Union in 1922 as the Ukrainian Soviet
Socialist Republic.
The Ukrainian national idea persevered during
the twenties, but with Stalin’s rise to power
and the campaign for collectivization, the
Soviet leadership imposed a campaign of terror
that ravaged the intellectual class. Stalin also
created an artificial famine (called the
Holodomor in Ukrainian) as part of his forced
collectivization policies, which killed millions
of previously independent peasants and others
throughout the country. Estimates of deaths from
the 1932-33 famine alone range from 3 million to
7 million.
When the Nazis invaded the Soviet Union in
1941, some Ukrainians, particularly in the west,
welcomed what they saw as liberation from
Communist rule, but this did not last as they
quickly came to understand the nature of Nazi
rule. Nazi brutality was directed principally
against Ukraine's Jews (of whom an estimated 1
million were killed), but also against many
other Ukrainians. Babyn Yar in Kiev was the site
of one of the most horrific Nazi massacres of
Ukrainian Jews, ethnic Ukrainians, and many
others. Kiev and other parts of the country were
heavily damaged.
After the Nazi and Soviet invasions of Poland
in 1939, the western Ukrainian regions were
incorporated into the Soviet Union. Armed
resistance against Soviet authority continued as
late as the 1950s. During periods of relative
liberalization--as under Nikita Khrushchev from
1955 to 1964 and during the period of
"perestroika" under Mikhail Gorbachev --
Ukrainian communists pursued nationalist
objectives. The 1986 explosion at the Chornobyl
(Chernobyl in Russian) nuclear power plant,
located in the Ukrainian SSR, and the Soviet
Government’s initial efforts to conceal the
extent of the catastrophe from its own people
and the world, was a watershed for many
Ukrainians in exposing the severe problems of
the Soviet system. Ukraine became an independent
state on August 24, 1991, and was a co-founder
of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
following the dissolution of the Soviet Union,
although it has not officially joined the
organization.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Ukraine has a parliamentary-presidential system
of government with separate executive, judicial,
and legislative branches. The president
nominates the defense and foreign ministers, and
the Prosecutor General and Chief of the State
Security Service (SBU), each of whom must be
confirmed by the parliament. Beginning in 2006,
the 450-member unicameral parliament (Supreme
Rada) names the prime minister, who in turn will
nominate other ministers. The Supreme Rada
initiates legislation, ratifies international
agreements, and approves the budget. Its members
are elected to five-year terms. Following free
elections held on December 1, 1991, Leonid M.
Kravchuk, former chairman of the Ukrainian Rada,
was elected for a five-year term, and became
Ukraine's first president. At the same time, a
referendum on independence was approved by more
than 90% of the voters. Political groupings in
Ukraine include former communists, socialists,
agrarians, liberals, nationalists, and various
centrist and independent forces.
Shortly after becoming independent, Ukraine
named a parliamentary commission to prepare a
new constitution, adopted a multi-party system,
and adopted legislative guarantees of civil and
political rights for national minorities. A new,
democratic constitution was adopted on June 28,
1996, which mandates a pluralistic political
system with protection of basic human rights and
liberties. Amendments that took effect January
1, 2006, shifted significant powers from the
president to the prime minister and Supreme Rada.
Freedom of religion is guaranteed by law,
although religious organizations are required to
register with local authorities and with the
central government. Minority rights are
respected in accordance with a 1991 law
guaranteeing ethnic minorities the right to
schools and cultural facilities and the use of
national languages in conducting personal
business. According to the constitution,
Ukrainian is the only official state language.
In Crimea and some parts of eastern Ukraine --
areas with substantial ethnic Russian minorities
-- local and regional governments permit Russian
as a language for local official correspondence.
Freedom of speech and press are guaranteed by
law and by the constitution, and authorities
generally respect these rights. Prior to the
"Orange Revolution," however, authorities
sometimes interfered with the news media through
intimidation and other forms of pressure. In
particular, the failure of the previous
government to conduct a thorough, credible, and
transparent investigation into the 2000
disappearance and murder of independent
journalist Heorhiy Gongadze, in which
then-government officials have been credibly
implicated, negatively affected Ukraine's
international image. Freedom of the media and
respect for citizens’ rights have increased
markedly since the government of President
Yushchenko took office in January 2005.
Ethnic tensions in Crimea during 1992
prompted a number of pro-Russian political
organizations to advocate secession of Crimea
and annexation to Russia. (Crimea was ceded by
the RFSSR to the Ukrainian SSR in 1954, in
recognition of historic links and for economic
convenience, to mark the 300th anniversary of
Ukraine’s union with Russia.) In July 1992, the
Crimean and Ukrainian parliaments determined
that Crimea would remain under Ukrainian
jurisdiction while retaining significant
cultural and economic autonomy.
Official trade unions have been grouped under
the Federation of Trade Unions. A number of
independent unions, which emerged during 1992,
among them the Independent Union of Miners of
Ukraine, have formed the Consultative Council of
Free Trade Unions. While the right to strike is
legally guaranteed, strikes based solely on
political demands are prohibited.
In July 1994, Leonid Kuchma was elected as
Ukraine's second president in free and fair
elections. Kuchma was reelected in November 1999
to another five-year term, with 56% of the vote.
International observers criticized aspects of
the election, especially slanted media coverage;
however, the outcome of the vote was not called
into question. Ukraine's March 2002
parliamentary elections were characterized by
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) as flawed, but an improvement over
the 1998 elections. The pro-presidential For a
United Ukraine bloc won the largest number of
seats, followed by the reformist Our Ukraine
bloc of former Prime Minister Viktor Yushchenko,
and the Communist Party. There are 450 seats in
parliament, all chosen from party lists by
proportional vote.
The campaign leading to the October 31, 2004
presidential election was characterized by
widespread violations of democratic norms,
including government intimidation of the
opposition and of independent media, abuse of
state administrative resources, highly skewed
media coverage, and numerous provocations. The
two major candidates--Prime Minister Viktor
Yanukovych and opposition leader (and former
Prime Minister) Viktor Yushchenko--each garnered
between 39% and 40% of the vote and proceeded to
a winner-take-all second round. The November 21
runoff election was marred by credible reports
of widespread and significant violations,
including illegal expulsion of opposition
representatives from election commissions,
multiple voting by busloads of people, abuse of
absentee ballots, reports of coercion of votes
in schools and prisons, and an abnormally high
number of (easily manipulated) mobile ballot box
votes. Hundreds of thousands of people took to
the streets of Kiev and other cities to protest
electoral fraud and express support for
Yushchenko, and conducted ongoing peaceful
demonstrations during what came to be known as
the "Orange Revolution."
The OSCE International Election Observation
Mission found that the November 21, 2004 run-off
presidential election "did not meet a
considerable number of OSCE commitments and
Council of Europe and other European standards
for democratic elections…Overall, State
executive authorities and the Central Election
Commission (CEC) displayed a lack of will to
conduct a genuine democratic election process."
Other independent observers were similarly
critical. On November 24, 2004, the CEC declared
Prime Minister Yanukovych the winner with 49.46%
compared to 46.61% for Yushchenko. The U.S. and
Europe refused to accept the result as
legitimate due to the numerous, uninvestigated
reports of fraud. European leaders traveled to
Kiev to mediate a political solution between the
parties. On November 27, Ukraine’s Supreme Rada
passed a resolution declaring that the election
results as announced did not represent the will
of the people. On December 1, the Rada passed a
vote of "no confidence" in the government. On
December 3, Ukraine’s Supreme Court invalidated
the CEC’s announced results and mandated a
repeat of the second round vote to take place on
December 26. An agreement mediated by the
European leaders resulted in new legislation
being passed by the Rada and signed by the
President December 8. The electoral law was
reformed to close loopholes that had permitted
pervasive electoral fraud. The Constitution was
amended, effective not earlier than September
2005, to transfer power, especially with respect
to appointment of Ministers, from the President
to the Cabinet. Yet another law was passed, in
first reading, to devolve some powers of the
central government to regional councils. In
addition, Prime Minister Yanukovych requested
and was granted a leave of absence, and
Prosecutor General Hennadiy Vasilyev submitted
his resignation.
The December 26 re-vote took place in an
atmosphere of calm. While irregularities were
noted, observers found no systemic or massive
fraud. The OSCE Mission noted that "campaign
conditions were markedly more equal, observers
received fewer reports of pressure on voters,
the election administration was more transparent
and the media more balanced than in previous
rounds…in our collective view Ukraine’s
elections have moved substantially closer to
meeting OSCE and other European standards." On
January 10, 2005, after the CEC and the Supreme
Court had considered and rejected numerous
complaints and appeals filed by the Yanukovych
campaign, the CEC certified the results.
Yushchenko won 51.99% of the votes, with 44.20%
for Yanukovych. 2.34% voted against both, and
1.45% of ballots were invalidated. The
Yanukovych campaign filed one last appeal with
the Supreme Court, which rejected it on January
20 and authorized the publication of the results
in "Government Courier" and "Voice of Ukraine,"
rendering them official and final. President
Yushchenko was inaugurated January 23, 2005.
Ukraine held parliamentary and local
elections on March 26, 2006. International
observers noted that conduct of the Rada
election was in line with international
standards for democratic elections, making this
the most free and fair in Ukraine's history.
Unlike the first rounds of the 2004 presidential
election, candidates and parties were able to
express themselves freely in a lively press and
assembled without hindrance. There was no
systemic abuse of administrative resources as
there had been under the previous regime. The
opposition Party of Regions and the bloc of
former Prime Minster Tymoshenko, whose
government the President dismissed in September
2005, finished ahead of the pro-presidential Our
Ukraine bloc. Other parties passing the 3%
threshold to enter parliament were the Socialist
Party of Ukraine and the Communist Party of
Ukraine. No party held the majority of Rada
seats needed to form a government, and as of
late April 2006, negotiations to form a
coalition were ongoing.
Security forces are controlled by the
president, although they are subject to
investigation by a permanent parliamentary
commission. Surveillance is permitted for
reasons of national security.
After independence, Ukraine established its
own military forces of about 780,000 from the
troops and equipment inherited from the Soviet
Union. Under defense reform legislation passed
in 2004, Ukraine is strengthening civilian
control of the military, professionalizing its
non-commissioned officer (NCO) corps,
modernizing force structure to improve
interoperability with NATO, and reducing troop
numbers, all with an eye toward achieving NATO
standards. Current force levels are
approximately 225,000 (plus 90,000 civilian
workers in the Ministry of Defense). The
Ministry of Defense plans to continue force
reductions by approximately 20,000 personnel per
year to reach a final end state of 143,000 by
2011. Ukraine’s stated national policy is
Euro-Atlantic integration, including with both
NATO and the European Union. NATO offered
Ukraine an "Intensified Dialogue on Membership
Issues" in April 2005. Ukraine had previously
signed an agreement with NATO on using Ukraine's
strategic airlift capabilities and has been an
active participant in Partnership for Peace
exercises, in Balkans peacekeeping, and
Coalition operations in Iraq. Ukrainian units
have been serving in the U.S. sector in Kosovo,
and served in the Polish-led division in Iraq.
Currently, Ukraine participates in 10
peacekeeping missions in 8 countries and has up
to 50 troops serving in supporting roles in
Iraq.
Principal Government Officials
President--Viktor A. Yushchenko
Prime Minister--Yuriy I. Yekhanurov
Foreign Minister--Borys I. Tarasyuk
Speaker of the Rada (Parliament)--Volodymyr
Lytvyn
Ukraine maintains an
embassy
at 3350 M Street NW, Washington, DC 20007 (tel.
202-349-2920).
ECONOMY
With rich farmlands, a well-developed industrial
base, highly trained labor, and a good education
system, Ukraine has the potential to become a
major European economy. After eight straight
years of sharp economic decline from the early
to late 1990s, the standard of living for most
citizens declined more than 50%, leading to
widespread poverty. Beginning in 2000 economic
growth has averaged 7.4% per year, reaching
12.1% in 2004, but falling to 2.6% in 2005.
Personal incomes are rising. The macro economy
is stable, with the hyperinflation of the early
post-Soviet period now reduced to just over 10
%. Ukraine's currency, the hryvnia, was
introduced in September 1996 and has remained
stable despite a small nominal appreciation in
April 2005. While economic growth continues,
Ukraine's long-term economic prospects depend on
acceleration of market reforms. The economy
remains burdened by excessive government
regulation, corruption, and lack of law
enforcement, and while the Yushchenko government
has taken steps against corruption and small and
medium enterprises have been largely privatized,
much remains to be done to restructure and
privatize key sectors such as energy and
telecommunications.
Ukraine is rich in natural resources. It has
a major ferrous metal industry, producing cast
iron, steel, and steel pipe, and its chemical
industry produces coke, mineral fertilizers, and
sulfuric acid. Manufactured goods include
airplanes, turbines, metallurgical equipment,
diesel locomotives, and tractors. It also is a
major producer of grain, sunflower seeds, and
sugar and has a broad industrial base, including
much of the former USSR's space and rocket
industry. Although oil and natural gas reserves
are small, it has important energy sources, such
as coal, and large mineral deposits, and is one
of the world's leading energy transit countries,
providing transportation of Russian and Caspian
oil and gas across its territory.
Ukraine encourages foreign trade and
investment. The foreign investment law allows
Westerners to purchase businesses and property,
to repatriate revenue and profits, and to
receive compensation in the event that property
were to be nationalized by a future government.
However, complex laws and regulations, poor
corporate governance, weak enforcement of
contract law by courts and corruption have
discouraged broad foreign direct investment in
Ukraine. While there is a functioning stock
market, the lack of protection for minority
shareholder rights severely restricts portfolio
investment activities. Total foreign direct
investment in Ukraine was approximately $16.375
billion as of January 1, 2006. At $349 per
capita, this was one of the lowest figures in
the region.
While countries of the former Soviet Union
remain important trading partners, especially
Russia and Turkmenistan for energy imports,
Ukraine’s trade is becoming more diversified.
Europe is now the destination of over one third
of Ukraine's exports, while around one quarter
of Ukraine's exports go to Russia and the CIS.
Exports of machinery and machine tools are on
the rise relative to steel, which constitutes
over 30% of exports. Ukraine imports over 80% of
its oil and 73% of its natural gas. Russia ranks
as Ukraine's principal supplier of oil and
Russian firms now own and/or operate the
majority of Ukraine's refining capacity. Natural
gas imports come from Russia and Turkmenistan,
which deliver the gas through a pipeline system
owned and controlled by Gazprom, Russia's
state-owned gas monopoly. In 2005 and 2006,
Ukraine switched from barter to cash payments
for gas imports. Ukraine controls the gas
pipelines on its territory that are also used to
transit Russian gas to Western Europe. The
complex relationship between supplier,
transporter, and consumer has led to some
tensions, including Russia's decision to cut off
gas supplies for three days in January 2006.
The Government of Ukraine's 12-month $605
million precautionary standby agreement with the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) expired in
March 2005. In Article IV Consultations, the IMF
recommends fiscal discipline and structural
reforms, particularly of Ukraine's pension
system. In July 2005, the World Bank approved a
$250 million Development Policy Loan (formerly a
Programmatic Adjustment Loan) to support reforms
to improve the investment climate, public
administration and financial management, and
social inclusion. European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) project
outlays totaled 248 million Euros in 2004,
bringing its portfolio to almost 2 billion
Euros.
In 1992, Ukraine became a member of the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
It is a member of the EBRD but not a member of
the World Trade Organization (WTO). Ukraine
applied for membership in the WTO in 1995.
Progress on its application has been slow but
picked up momentum in 2004 and 2005. The
government has made accession to the WTO a
priority.
Environmental Issues
Ukraine is interested in cooperating on regional
environmental issues. Conservation of natural
resources is a stated high priority, although
implementation suffers from a lack of financial
resources. Ukraine established its first nature
preserve, Askanyia-Nova, in 1921 and has a
program to breed endangered species.
Ukraine has significant environmental
problems, especially those resulting from the
Chornobyl nuclear power plant disaster in 1986
and from industrial pollution. In accordance
with its agreement with the G7 and European
Commission in 1995, Ukraine permanently closed
the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant in December of
2000. Urgent measures for radiation and workers
safety as well as structural improvements to the
"sarcophagus" erected by the Soviet Union are
largely complete, and the contract for
construction of the new shelter to be built
around the sarcophagus is expected to be awarded
mid-2006.
Ukraine also has established a Ministry of
Environment and has introduced a pollution fee
system, which levies taxes on air and water
emissions and solid waste disposal. The
resulting revenues are channeled to
environmental protection activities, but
enforcement of this pollution fee system is lax.
Ukraine ratified the Kyoto Protocol in April
2004.
Construction of a shipping canal through a UN
protected core biosphere reserve in the Danube
Delta, which began in May 2004, is an
environmental issue of international interest.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
The Yushchenko government has declared
Euro-Atlantic integration to be its primary
foreign policy objective and has sought to
maintain good relations with Russia. The
European Union’s Partnership and Cooperation
Agreement (PCA) with Ukraine went into force on
March 1, 1998. After the 2004 round of EU
expansion, the EU did not signal a willingness
to consider Ukraine for an association
agreement, as Ukraine had hoped for, but instead
included it in a new "neighbor" policy,
disappointing many Ukrainians. On January 31,
1992, Ukraine joined the then-Conference on
Security and Cooperation in Europe (now the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe -- OSCE), and on March 10, 1992, it
became a member of the North Atlantic
Cooperation Council. Ukraine signed a Charter
Agreement with NATO in 1997, sent troops to
Kosovo in close cooperation with NATO countries,
signed an agreement for NATO use of Ukrainian
strategic airlift assets, and has declared
interest in eventual membership. It is the most
active member of the Partnership for Peace
(PfP). In April 2005, NATO offered an
"Intensified Dialogue on Membership Issues" to
Ukraine.
Ukraine maintains peaceful and constructive
relations with all its neighbors, though there
are some unresolved maritime issues along the
Danube and in the Black Sea with Romania; it has
especially close ties with Poland and Russia.
Relations with Russia are complicated by
differing foreign policy priorities in the
region, energy dependence, payment arrears,
disagreement over compliance with the 1997
agreement on the stationing of the Russian Black
Sea Fleet in Sevastopol, and a dispute over
bilateral boundaries in the Sea of Azov and the
Kerch Strait. Ukraine co-founded the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) on
December 8, 1991, but in January 1993 it refused
to endorse a draft charter strengthening
political, economic, and defense ties among CIS
members. Ukraine was a founding member of GUAM
(Georgia-Ukraine-Azerbaijan-Moldova) and has
taken the lead with Georgia to promote
cooperation among emerging democracies in the
Community for Democratic Choice, which held its
first summit meeting December 1-2, 2005 in Kiev.
In 1999-2001, Ukraine served as a
non-permanent member of the UN Security Council.
Soviet Ukraine joined the United Nations in 1945
as one of the original members following a
Western compromise with the Soviet Union, which
had asked for seats for all 15 of its union
republics. Ukraine has consistently supported
peaceful, negotiated settlements to disputes. It
has participated in the five-sided (now "5+2")
talks on the conflict in Moldova and under
President Yushchenko has actively boosted
efforts to seek a resolution. Ukraine has also
promoted a peaceful resolution to conflict in
the post-Soviet state of Georgia. Ukraine has
also made a substantial contribution to UN
peacekeeping operations since 1992.
U.S.-UKRAINIAN RELATIONS
The dissolution of the Soviet Union in December
1991 brought an end to the Cold War and created
an opportunity to build bilateral relations with
the New Independent States (NIS) as they began a
political and economic transformation. On
December 25, 1991, the United States officially
recognized the independence of Ukraine. It
upgraded its consulate in the capital, Kiev, to
embassy status on January 21, 1992. The U.S.
ambassador to Ukraine is John E. Herbst, the
fifth U.S. ambassador since Ukrainian
independence.
The United States attaches great importance
to the success of Ukraine's transition to a
democratic state with a flourishing market
economy. Following a period of economic decline
characterized by high inflation and a continued
reliance on state controls, the Ukrainian
Government began taking steps in the fall of
1999 to reinvigorate economic reform that had
been stalled for years due to a lack of a reform
majority in the Ukrainian parliament. The
Ukrainian Government's stated determination to
implement comprehensive economic reform is a
welcome development, and the U.S. is committed
to strengthening its support for Ukraine as it
continues on this difficult path. Bilateral
relations suffered a setback in September 2002
when the U.S. Government announced it had
authenticated a recording of President Kuchma's
July 2000 decision to transfer a Kolchuga early
warning system to Iraq. The Government of
Ukraine denied that the transfer had occurred.
Ukraine’s democratic "Orange Revolution" has led
to closer cooperation and more open dialogue
between Ukraine and the United States. U.S.
policy remains centered on realizing and
strengthening a democratic, prosperous, and
secure Ukraine more closely integrated into
Europe and Euro-Atlantic structures.
U.S. Assistance to Ukraine
A cornerstone for the continuing U.S.
partnership with Ukraine and the other NIS has
been the Freedom for Russia and Emerging
Eurasian Democracies and Open Markets (FREEDOM)
Support Act (FSA), enacted in October 1992.
Ukraine has been a primary recipient of FSA
assistance. Total U.S. assistance since
independence has been more than $3 billion. U.S.
assistance to Ukraine is targeted to promote
political and economic reform and to address
urgent humanitarian needs. The U.S. has
consistently encouraged Ukraine's transition to
a democratic society with a prosperous
market-based economy. For more detailed
information on these programs, please see the
"Annual Report to Congress on U.S. Government
Assistance to and Cooperative Activities with
Eurasia," which is available on the State
Department's website at the following address:
http://www.state.gov/p/eur/ace/. Information
is also available on USAID’s website at the
address:
http://www.usaid.gov.
[Fact
sheet on FY 2005 U.S. Assistance to
Ukraine.]
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--John
E. Herbst
Deputy Chief of Mission--Sheila S. Gwaltney
Political Counselor--Aubrey A. Carlson
Economic Counselor--Douglas Kramer
Public Affairs Counselor--Michelle Logsdon
Consul General--MaryKay Loss Carlson
Management Counselor--Jennifer Bonner
Commercial Officer--Robert Shipley
USAID Mission Director--Earl Gast
Regional Security Officer--George Nutwell
Department of Energy Director-Riaz Awan
Agricultural Attaché--Garth Thorburn
Defense Attaché--Colonel James Molloy
Peace Corps Director--Karl Beck
The U.S. Embassy in Kiev is at 10 Yuriya
Kotsyubynskoho Street, 01901 (tel. [380] (44)
490-4000). The Embassy’s website is
http://kiev.usembassy.gov/.