Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

The ‘What About Ukraine?’ Defense of Trump Jr.’s Russia Meeting – The Atlantic

Before welcoming Donald Trump Jr. onto his show on Tuesday, Sean Hannity boiled down his defense of the presidents son to one word: Ukraine. In obsessing over whether Trumps campaign colluded with Russian officials to interfere in the 2016 presidential electionand most recently whether it was ethical and legal for Trump Jr. to meet with a Russian lawyer in the hope of obtaining damaging information about Hillary Clinton from the KremlinDemocrats and journalists have completely ignored an example of actual election interference, the Fox News host fumed.

A Democratic National Committee operative and Ukrainian government officials tried to aid and assist Hillary Clinton and damage Donald Trump, Hannity said, and the fact that nobody is talking about it demonstrates that the media is hysterical about Russia, hypocritical in its outrage, and hopelessly in the tank for the Democrats. The Ukraine rebuttal has been ricocheting across right-wing media in recent days, advanced by Trump aides such as Sebastian Gorka and Sarah Sanders and commentators like Rush Limbaugh and Kayleigh McEnany.

Despite this weeks revelations, theres still not a syllable, theres not a vowel, theres not a consonant of evidence that Trump colluded with the Russians to boost his candidacy, Limbaugh declared on his radio show. And yet the Democrats collusion with the Ukrainians is written out in complete sentences for all to see: We know for a fact that Ukraine did try to help Hillary sabotage Trump, Limbaugh said.

The Everybody-Does-It Defense of Collusion

So what precisely do we know about the Ukraine scandal that nobodys heard of? How does it compare to the Russia case and what lessons does the comparison offer for where benign foreign involvement in elections ends and malignant foreign interference begins?

The ur-text for the Ukraine counterargument is a Politico report from January headlined, Ukrainian efforts to sabotage Trump backfire. The investigation details three distinct ways in which Ukrainian officials allegedly assisted Hillary Clintons campaign.

The Political Operative

The first involves the Ukrainian American political operative Alexandra Chalupa. As a paid consultant to the Democratic National Committee, Chalupa was tasked with something unrelated to Ukraine: helping the party reach out to various ethnic groups in the United States. But during her time in that role, which ended after the Democratic convention in July, she was also immersed in a side project: investigating Paul Manafort, Trumps onetime campaign chairman, and the work he did advising the former pro-Russian Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych. Politico reports that as part of this effort, Chalupa cultivated a network of sources in Ukraine and the United States, including investigative journalists, government officials, and private intelligence operatives. She occasionally shared her findings with officials from the DNC and Clintons campaign and voiced her concerns about Manaforts Russia ties with Ukraines ambassador to the United States, Valeriy Chaly, during a meeting at the Ukrainian Embassy.

A DNC official told Politico that the party didnt incorporate Chalupas findings into its opposition research on Trump, and the Ukrainian Embassy has denied involvement in Chalupas inquiry. But relying on the account of a former Ukrainian Embassy staffer and several anonymous sources, Politico sketched out a triangle of interactions between Chalupa, the DNC, and the Ukrainian Embassyone based on apparent sympathy with Chalupas research project, if not outright coordination:

[T]he former DNC staffer and the operative familiar with the situation agreed that with the DNCs encouragement, Chalupa asked embassy staff to try to arrange an interview in which [Ukrainian President Petro] Poroshenko might discuss Manaforts ties to Yanukovych.

While the embassy declined that request, officials there became helpful in Chalupas efforts, she said, explaining that she traded information and leads with them. If I asked a question, they would provide guidance, or if there was someone I needed to follow up with. But she stressed, There were no documents given, nothing like that.

Politico uncovered little concrete evidence of Chalupas work having a major impact on the presidential campaign. Her attempt to launch a congressional investigation into the Trump campaigns connections with Russia didnt succeed. She served as a resource to journalists investigating Manafort but, as Politico noted, its not uncommon for outside operatives to serve as intermediaries between governments and reporters.

The Corruption Investigation

What had a greater impact on the campaign, according to Politico, was the decision by a Ukrainian anti-corruption agency to investigate a ledger that allegedly showed millions of dollars in off-the-books payments to Manafort when he was serving as a political adviser to Yanukovychand the decision by one Ukrainian lawmaker in particular, Serhiy Leshchenko, to publicize the probe. News of the ledger and the investigation made its way into The New York Times and the Clinton campaigns talking points about Trumps troubling relationship with Russia, and Manafort soon resigned as Trumps campaign chief amid the fallout from these revelations and other reports of his activities in Ukraine.

The Ukrainian president has denied targeting Manafort (the government agency conducting the investigation is independent of the presidents office). But Leshchenko, a member of the presidents political bloc, admitted at the time that one of his goals in raising alarms about Manafort was to expose Trump as a pro-Russian candidate who can break the geopolitical balance in the world by allying with Moscow rather than longtime U.S. allies like Ukraine. And, as Politico notes, the investigation into the payments listed in the ledgerwhich in April were partially corroborated by the AP through wire transfers that Manafort claimed were legitimatemysteriously faded after the U.S. election, raising questions about whether Ukrainian officials aired concerns about Manafort less to root out corruption than to undermine the Trump campaign.

The Public Criticism

The third way Ukrainian officials sought to influence the election is the most explicit and straightforward: A number of them made their preferences known. The Interior Minister Arsen Avakov, for example, dismissed Trump as a dangerous marginal. Ukrainian Ambassador Valeriy Chaly may deny collaborating with Alexandra Chalupa on her Manafort research, but he cant exactly distance himself from an op-ed he wrote in The Hill in response to candidate Trumps suggestion that he might recognize Russias annexation of the Ukrainian territory of Crimea.

Trumps remarks, Chaly wrote at the time, call for appeasement of an aggressor and support the violation of a sovereign countrys territorial integrity and anothers breach of international law. In the eyes of the world, such comments seem alien to a country seen by partners as a strong defender of democracy and international order.

* * *

The public critiques of Trump by Chaly and other Ukrainian officials were arguably unwise and unconventional from a diplomatic perspective, but theyre not all that different from German Chancellor Angela Merkel praising Hillary Clinton or Russian President Vladimir Putin calling Trump bright as they maneuvered to defend their interests in the presidential race. Such foreign involvement in elections is to be expected in a country whose politics is as internationally consequential as Americas.

Where things get more complicated is in comparing the specifics of the Russia and Ukraine casesat least to the extent that we understand them so far. In both cases, a foreign government appears to have influenced the U.S. election in significant but ultimately unquantifiable ways. The Ukrainian government announced an investigation that contributed to the downfall of Trumps campaign chief, while the Russian government is thought to have spread fake news and hacked and distributed Democratic Party emails that helped shape the political debate in the final stretch of the presidential campaign.

But there are also critical differences in the nature of the influence exercised by these governments: It remains unclear, for instance, whether the Ukrainian investigation into Manafort was expressly designed to weaken Trump, whereas U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded with confidence that Russias cyber campaign was intended to hurt Clinton and help Trump. The Russians stealthily dealt in stolen emails, the Ukrainians in evidence collected as part of a public investigation. The Ukrainian probe has been linked to a government agency and a crusading lawmaker, but not to the president himself; the Russian campaign seems to have been directed from Vladimir Putin on down. The Ukraine story involves one government investigation and one womans side project; the Russia story involves, as The New York Times once described it, a foreign government-sponsored cyberespionage and information-warfare campaign to disrupt an election without precedent in American history.

As Kenneth Vogel, one of the journalists who wrote the original Politico article, noted on Twitter on Wednesday, overall Russian govt effort to sabotage Hillary/boost Trump was obviously MUCH MORE CONCERTED than anything done by anyone in the Ukrainian govt.

The Ukrainian operation was pretty small beer. It just didnt rise to the level of the Russian influence campaign, David Stern, a Ukraine-based journalist and the co-author with Vogel of the Politico article, told me. I think were dealing in very broad strokes with something similar, but when you get into the details, theyre totally different situations.

In terms of collusion between U.S. political operatives and a foreign government, the evidence is mixed in both instances. In the case of Russia, the clearest indication of collusion so far is Donald Trump Jr.s eagerness to meet with a Russian lawyer who he thought had dirt on Clinton from the Russian government. Here was a figure at the highest reaches of the Trump campaign seeking out opposition research from a purported representative of a U.S. adversary. Based on what we know so far, however, the meeting didnt produce further collaboration between the parties. Relative to Trump Jr., Chalupa was a lower-level operative with a far more tenuous connection to the presidential campaign she was associated with. But she claims to have received tangible help from actual government officials (albeit U.S. allies), not merely the promise of help from figures with apparent ties to that government.

As far as the law is concerned, in contrast to what Trump Jr.s emails reveal, there is not clear evidence of the Clinton campaign coordinating with a foreign national or encouraging or accepting their help, Lawrence Noble of the Campaign Legal Center told The Washington Post this week. If the Ukrainian government did oppo[sitional] research in coordination with the Clinton campaign or the DNC and they knowingly accepted the information, there is a possible [illegal] foreign national contribution. But if Chalupa was gathering the information and passing it on, the question is who did the work and what did the Clinton campaign and DNC know.

Yet the Trump Jr. meeting doesnt constitute a clear-cut violation of the law either. In arguing that it would be a stretch to construe Trump Jr.s meeting with the Russian lawyer as a prohibited solicitation by a campaign of something of value from a foreign national, the legal scholar Jonathan Turley cited Chalupas alleged work with Ukrainian officials as a similarly ambiguous case. It is common for foreign governments to withhold or take actions to influence elections in other countries, he wrote. Information is often shared through various channels during elections from lobbyists, non-government organizations, and government officials.

While the scale of the Russian influence campaign may dwarf that of the Ukrainian campaign, the difficulty in each case of defining what constitutes improper collusion or illegal engagement with a foreign government is instructive, as are the Trump camps efforts this week to trot out other examples of foreign interference in the electionsuch as the Chinese ambassador to the U.S. requesting a private meeting with Clinton campaign officials. Surveying trends such the flood of money into politics and the increasing sophistication of technologies to exert political influence, the law professor Zephyr Teachout wrote in 2009 that Given the global impact of United States policy, twenty years from now massive efforts to influence United States electionsfrom outside its borderswill be routine. Turns out we didnt have to wait 20 years. Were already seeing how varied those efforts can be.

As Stern put it to me: Weve had these debates about foreign governments trying to influence [U.S. elections] for a while now, havent we? The question is: Whats acceptable? One does recognize that there will be an attempt [to influence elections]. The question is how that attempt is metwhether its greeted, whether its flat-out rejected. How high on the food chain does it go?

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The 'What About Ukraine?' Defense of Trump Jr.'s Russia Meeting - The Atlantic

EU tells Ukraine to intensify anti-corruption efforts – Irish Times

Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko, president of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker and president of the European Council Donald Tusk: met at Ukraine-EU summit in Kiev. Photograph: Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty

The European Union has urged Ukraine to ramp up its battle with corruption if it wants to move closer to the bloc and attract much-needed foreign investment at a Kiev summit that took place during protests demanding tougher action on graft.

Two days after the EU finally ratified a historic trade and political pact with Ukraine, top officials from both sides insisted the countrys future lay with Europe and that it would survive a draining hybrid conflict with its former ally Russia.

There was disappointment, however, that no final declaration was expected after the summit due to disagreement over wording among EU states, and that Brussels watered down demands that Ukraine create a special anti-corruption court.

What we are asking . . . is to increase the fight against corruption, because corruption is undermining all the efforts this great nation is undertaking, European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said.

We remain very concerned, he added, alongside European Council president Donald Tusk and Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko.

If you do not destroy corruption at all levels in your society, investors wont come to Ukraine. It should be the most important battle, Mr Juncker was quoted as saying by the Ukrainian presidency.

As protesters gathered outside parliament to demand more judicial and anti-corruption reforms and the creation of a special court to try graft cases, Mr Juncker said that in fact a special chamber devoted to this issue, that will be enough.

It was unclear what powers the chamber would have inside Ukraines supreme court, but anti-corruption campaigners have long insisted that a new court was needed to tackle graft among powerful businessmen and politicians.

Why the EU position is changing so fast? Ukraines Anti-Corruption Action Centre asked on Twitter.

Mykhailo Zhernakov, a legal expert at a Ukrainian NGO called the Reanimation Package of Reforms, said: Theres no way that a chamber in any court will be as independent as a separate court . . . Its not going to help.

Mr Poroshenko and his allies are accused of dithering on legal reforms because they fear that a fully independent judiciary would investigate their dealings and stop them using the threat of prosecution in crooked courts as leverage over rivals.

The Ukrainska Pravda investigative news outlet reported that a final summit declaration had been stymied by opposition from the Netherlands backed by some other member states to any acknowledgment of Ukraines European aspirations.

The Dutch parliament approved the EU-Ukraine association deal only this year, more than two years after it was signed, following a non-binding referendum in which most of the 32 per cent of voters who turned out oppose the pact.

Glossing over the absence of a final statement, Mr Tusk said the key phrase in the historic pact was that the European Union acknowledges the European aspirations of Ukraine and welcomes its European choice.

Your most important taskshould beto builda modern state that is citizen-friendly, resistant to corruption, respectful of the highest standards of public life, he added. If you pass also this exam, nothing and no one will defeat you.

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EU tells Ukraine to intensify anti-corruption efforts - Irish Times

U Vlad bro? Docker accidentally cuts off Ukraine – The Register

DevOps darling Docker accidentally cut off the entire country of Ukraine earlier this week following an overzealous effort to enforce US sanctions against Russia.

On Tuesday, the open platform's users based in the Eastern European country started posting to Docker's support forums complaining that they were hitting a block to Docker's AWS-powered download service. "The Amazon CloudFront distribution is configured to block access from your country," read a pop-up on one person's screen.

Others quickly figured out it was a geo-location ban targeting Ukrainian IP addresses and got around the block by using proxies reporting from outside the country. But the question remained as to why Docker had blocked its service in Ukraine.

And the answer, it emerged a few hours later, was renewed sanctions placed against Russia for its annexation of Crimea, which used to be part of Ukraine, in 2014.

Late last month, the US Congress voted to expand existing sanctions and it appears as though those started being applied following the meeting between US president Trump and Russian president Putin at the recent G20 summit.

Trump has previously suggested he would lift the sanctions, but following the meeting it was clear that no agreement had been reached and Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov threatened that Russia would take its own actions against the US.

When it comes to sanctions, most people imagine it is only the refusal to sell weapons or fuel to a specific country, or freezing the accounts of individuals. But in reality they often extend much farther than that, and in the internet era often oblige companies under US legal control ie, most internet services companies to withdraw their services as well.

The only effective way of doing that is through geo-blocking, typically by identifying local ISPs and blacklisting their IP addresses. And so it was in this case, except that in trying to cut off Crimea, Docker's over-zealous tech team also managed to cut off the entire rest of the country probably by relying too heavily on Amazon's blocking technology.

To its credit, Docker realized the error within a few hours of receiving the complaints, lifted the block and posted to its tech forum with an apology.

"Hey everyone, sorry for the trouble. The IP restrictions put in place per US embargo rules were too extensive. We've unblocked Ukraine now and I'm glad to see it's working properly again. Thanks for raising the issue!," wrote one employee.

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U Vlad bro? Docker accidentally cuts off Ukraine - The Register

The window for reform is closing in Ukraine – Washington Post

By Melinda Haring By Melinda Haring July 11

Melinda Haring is the editor of the UkraineAlert blog at the Atlantic Council and a fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute.

Walking around Kiev on a sunny Saturday, a visitor could be forgiven for thinking all is well. Billboards advertise a website for registration of new businesses, a process that takes less than an hour. A craft brewery promises home delivery, and markets offer everything from pesto cheese to organic granola. A three-story department store that sells 150 Ukrainian brands embodies a lively fashion scene repeatedly profiled by Vogue. In short, signs of positive change abound, while the war in the east, which has taken more than 10,000 lives, is far away and practically invisible. And yet that may be precisely the problem.

Ukraine has some genuine achievements to which it can point. Some important reforms have taken place. Macroeconomic fundamentals are good; the value of the currency has stabilized. And Ukraine hasnt lost the war despite the direct involvement of Russia, whose forces are far more powerful.

And yet an air of blithe self-delusion prevails among Ukraines business elites, diplomats, politicians and even some activists. The optimists prefer to avoid addressing the countrys most intractable problems, from the war and the failed cease-fire agreement to the fact that there has been virtually no real foreign direct investment since 2014. Moreover, the next round of reform is likely to be especially tough, requiring a sense of compromise and political maturity that is currently absent. Its easier to keep repeating the governments clever line that the country has accomplished more in the past three years than it did in its first 23 years of independence.

The sad reality is that Ukraines reforms have stalled, and the window of opportunity is starting to close. None of former president Viktor Yanukovychs cronies have been prosecuted. Vested interests have blocked the process of building a clean Supreme Court from scratch. Although the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine has succeeded in bringing charges against two notoriously corrupt officials, former parliamentarian Mykola Martynenko and former head of the State Fiscal Service Roman Nasirov, powerful forces are pushing back. The court considering Nasirovs case refuses to examine all of the evidence. There are growing indications that the director of the anti-corruption bureau could be fired soon, and activists and parliamentarians worry that the bureaus powers may soon be curtailed.

Ulana Suprun, the acting health minister, is courageously pushing ahead with an ambitious revamp of the dismal health system. During his year in office, Finance Minister Oleksandr Danyliuk has managed to plug holes in the budget while pressing for pension and land reform. But the few remaining reformers face a deadline. The current parliamentary session ends on July 14. Once its over, campaign season begins, and all bets are off.

The International Monetary Fund, which pledged $17.5 billion to right the economy, has told Ukraine that it wont get any more assistance until it legalizes land sales, reforms its troubled pension system, creates an anti-corruption court and starts to privatize some of Ukraines 1,800 state-run companies. Of this formidable to-do list, only pension and health reform have a chance of passing before July 14.

Meanwhile, the government has been harassing prominent anti-corruption activists, defending an illiberal law that demands asset disclosures from investigative journalists and activists, and undermining national candidates, such as Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi and former Odessa province governor Mikheil Saakashvili, who might challenge President Petro Poroshenkos party in the 2018 parliamentary elections.

Time is running short. The government that follows this one could be far worse. As parliamentarian and reformer Mustafa Nayyem likes to remind us, these, for all their deficiencies, are the best president and parliament Ukraine has ever had.

The followers of Yulia Tymoshenko, no stranger to the West with her golden braids and fiery rhetoric, have already lined the main thoroughfare in Kiev with red and white tents. She tops polls as the most favorable national candidate, which is troubling, even if her numbers arent more than a modest 10 percent. Tymoshenkos populist policies, which include opposition to sensible land, health and pension reform, could potentially undo the real progress Ukraine has made in the past three years.

Ukraines outspoken activists continue to shine a light on the countrys many problems, and they have played a leading role in almost every step forward in the past three years. But civil society isnt enough.

If things continue as they are, Ukraines most talented will leave. More than 70 percent think the country is going in the wrong direction. The reforms that would better peoples lives materially still havent materialized, and some that have such as restructuring of the natural gas market to eliminate corruption hurt average people badly. As journalist Vitaliy Sych notes, People are tired, their patience is running out, and many are leaving. In 2016, nearly 1.3 million Ukrainians received temporary work permits in Poland, and another 116,000 were working there on longer-term permits. Ukrainians already make up the largest ethnic minority in the Czech Republic, and the second-largest in Italy and Portugal.

The space for meaningful change is shrinking, and fatigue and cynicism are widespread. But the country still has a chance. Kiev must push ahead now with the next round of urgently needed reforms, and the IMF should hold them to it.

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The window for reform is closing in Ukraine - Washington Post

Putin’s Dangerous New Ukraine Doctrine – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Putin's Dangerous New Ukraine Doctrine
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Nothing will be done until the Ukrainian & Syrian problems are solved! Hours before the two presidents met, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson underlined this tough line on sanctions by appointing Russia hawk Kurt Volker as chief U.S. envoy on Ukraine.
Ukraine welcomes US appointment of VolkerKyiv Post

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Putin's Dangerous New Ukraine Doctrine - Wall Street Journal (subscription)