Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/10/2012

The Ukrainian ‘W’

Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych bears a striking resemblance to former President George W. Bush.

Although Bush was born rich and Yanukovych poor, both were rowdy as youths, with the former drinking and carousing and the latter serving two jail terms for hooliganism.

Eventually both became serious, went into politics and became governors of large and economically important states — Texas and Donetsk — that served as springboards for their presidential ambitions. Both are — or claim to be — deeply religious: Bush a born-again Christian, Yanukovych an Orthodox Christian, and both love to hunt.

Like Bush, Yanukovych has an embarrassing proclivity to get his facts wrong. He has confused poet Anna Akhmatova with his billionaire backer Rinat Akhmetov, the Jewish writer Isaac Babel with the German socialist August Bebel, Slovenia with Slovakia and genocide with genetics. He has called playwright Anton Chekhov a Ukrainian poet and the Helsinki Treaty the Stockholm Treaty.

Yanukovych’s best-known gaffe was to have misspelled “proFFessor” back in 2004 — a mistake that is doubly embarrassing inasmuch as he claims to have two degrees, a master’s of international law and a doctorate of economic sciences. Bush only has an MBA from Harvard University, but his academic record was respectable and the degree is real. Yanukovych, in contrast, somehow managed to acquire both degrees and write a dissertation while serving as full-time deputy governor and then governor of Donetsk.

Both rose to power with the support of a regionally concentrated and ideologically focused base. Bush’s was in the red states in the middle of the United States and among Christian fundamentalists. Yanukovych’s was in the east and south of Ukraine and among pro-Soviet and anti-Western fundamentalists. Both also had the support of powerful billionaires who helped propel them to power.

Unsurprisingly, educated elites looked down on both men as crude, simplistic, dull-witted and undiplomatic. Although the two claimed to be unconcerned with such criticism, they quickly made adjustments in their image, polished their language and brushed up on their knowledge of the world. They also both relied heavily on U.S. public-relations and campaign consultants.

Like Bush’s victory over candidate Al Gore in the 2000 presidential vote, Yanukovych’s narrow victory over Yulia Tymoshenko on Feb. 7 produced several weeks of legal contestation and political maneuvering that was resolved only after the intervention of higher courts.

There is one final point of similarity. Both men promised to unify a deeply divided country. Bush failed to do so in his first term because he adopted a polarizing rhetoric and pursued partisan politics that alienated half the country. His attempts to rectify the situation in his second term came too late to save his reputation.

Yanukovych now faces a choice. He can pander to his base in Donetsk, divide Ukraine and be first-term Bush. Or he can appeal to the whole country, alienate some of his base and be second-term Bush.

If Yanukovych does the latter, he’ll succeed as president, and Ukraine will in all likelihood emerge from its current economic and political crisis. If he does the former, the Ukrainian “Dubya” will go down in history as an ignominious failure.

Alexander J. Motyl is a professor of political science at Rutgers University-Newark.




Tags

Ukraine



Also in Opinion

Putin Chasing Imaginary American Ghosts

Here we go again — another round of anti-Americanism from the Kremlin and state-controlled media. Blaming outside forces for Russia's woes has a long history in the country. The closer we get to the March 4 presidential election, the more intense the anti-American hysteria becomes.


Putting Everything In Its Place

Remember how I drove you all nuts with the innate propensity of Russian creatures and inanimate objects to stand, sit or lie? And how relieved you were when I moved on to other topics?
Well, I'm back.

Russia Gets Bad Rap Over Syria

As the violent standoff between Syria's security forces and armed opposition groups roils the country, the crisis has opened heated divisions at the United Nations Security Council.

A Propaganda Breakdown

Propaganda is not as powerful as many think. You might convince Russians that people in Egypt, Italy and Ukraine are paid or otherwise persuaded to join street protests, but you certainly cannot convince them that their own dissatisfaction with the government is the result of a foreign conspiracy.

Violent Reaction to Protests Could Bury Putin

Nonviolent revolutions do not always remain nonviolent, as the examples of uprisings in Egypt, Libya and Syria in the Arab Spring have shown. But peaceful movements for regime change often do succeed. For example, they have toppled illegitimate rulers, as with the post-Soviet Color Revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine, and ended apartheid in South Africa.

Realpolitik Without Realism

People have been asking me all week why the Kremlin is so stubbornly supportive of Syrian President Bashar Assad. "Is Russia's support based solely on weapons contracts with Syria," they wonder, "or the Kremlin's desire to maintain its naval base at the Tartus port?"




Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments



marian Rubchak

Interesting article but the education credentials are not as far a apart as they are made to sound. Remember hat Bush was given a "gentleman's pass,"which, although not totally bogus, does not invite an appreciation of an education earned. True--he did at least see the inside of a university, unlike Yanukovych


Report Inappropriate Comment




Comments via Facebook

print


Comments

This article has 1 comment on TheMoscowTimes.com and 0 comments on Facebook.

Leave a comment


Tags
Ukraine
To Our Readers

The Moscow Times welcomes letters to the editor. Letters for publication should be signed and bear the signatory's address and telephone number.

Letters to the editor should be sent by fax to (7-495) 232-6529, by e-mail to oped@imedia.ru, or by post. The Moscow Times reserves the right to edit letters.



Most Read