Waiting game
December 3, 2013Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych waited until Monday evening (02.12.2013), nearly two days after the protests in Kyiv escalated, to speak out. In an interview on Ukrainian television, he urged police and demonstrators to behave lawfully, saying, "It is very important that these activities are conducted peacefully."
The previous day, some half a million people took to the streets in Kyiv to demonstrate against Yanukovych and express their outrage at instances of police brutality in the early hours of Saturday (30.11.2013). Special forces from the Interior Ministry cracked down on several hundred young demonstrators at Kyiv's central Independence Square.
A key point of contention for demonstrators has been Yanukovych's decision to back out of signing an association and free trade agreement with the European Union last week. Violence erupted when rioters attempted to storm the presidential administration building.
Yanukovych: an experienced tactician
Observers are interpreting Yanukovych's two-day silence as a sign of indecision. "It seems to me that he hasn't yet decided what line to take," said Serhij Rachmanin, senior political editor at Kyiv's prestigious newspaper "Dzerkalo Tyzhnia," in an interview with DW. "We have a stand-off. Both sides - government and demonstrators - went too far."
However, Gerhard Simon, a Ukraine expert at the University of Cologne, believes Yanukovych's behavior is purely tactical. He is a man "who knows how to bide his time," Simon told DW. "This silence is not unwise. Whatever he does, it's going to be used against him."
The 63-year-old Yanukovych has been president of the Ukraine for nearly four years. Last weekend's protests against him were by far the largest since he took office in 2010.
On Sunday his power base appeared to be crumbling, as several prominent representatives of the ruling Party of Regions announced their resignation from the parliamentary group. There were also reports Serhiy Lyovochkin, chief of staff to Yanukovych, had stepped down, but these have not yet been officially confirmed.
However, the journalist Rachmanin said these developments are somewhat overrated. "I wouldn't say that the governing majority is about to fall apart."
Yanukovych's popularity in his strongholds in eastern and southern Ukraine is also unlikely to change after the recent events, added Rachmanin. Recent polls are not yet available.
Will the protests survive the winter?
Rachmanin believes that, despite the protests, Yanukovych has a relatively good chance to stay in power. The next presidential election isn't until 2015 and according to Rachmanin, the opposition has "no clear plan" to bring about a change of government.
In addition, the clashes between protesters and the police have been "thought-provoking" for at least part of the population, he said. Against this backdrop, Yanukovych wants to lay low and ride out the crisis.
Rachmanin believes a further escalation in violence by the police is still quite possible, though he thinks the reaction by the West could deter Yanukovych. "I think he wants to leave the door open to Europe," he said – if only to have something to oppose the pressure coming from Russia.
Ukraine expert Simon doesn't think Yanukovych will step down. But if the opposition is able to paralyze the country with a general strike, as it has warned it plans to do, then "many things are possible which we aren't yet able to foresee," he said.
Yanukovych's next move, according to Simon, is likely to signal a willingness to make concessions with the protesters and then play them like pawns, in the hope that winter will come and the protests "are lost in the snow."
Following in Kuchma's footsteps
Should Yanukovych's plan to wait out the protests be successful, he won't be the first Ukrainian president to employ the maneuver. In the winter of 2001, then President Leonid Kuchma was facing accusations of involvement in the killing of a critical journalist.
Thousands took to the streets and protested, calling for Kuchma to step down. There were brutal clashes between demonstrators and police in Kyiv. People were shocked and the protest movement lost its support. Kuchma remained president, finishing his term in early 2005.