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Exactly How Has the US Meddled in the Ukrainian Elections?
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Statement
before the US House International Relations Committee, December
7, 2004
Mr.
Chairman: President Bush said last week that, "Any election (in
Ukraine), if there is one, ought to be free from any foreign influence."
I agree with the president wholeheartedly. Unfortunately, it seems
that several US government agencies saw things differently and sent
US taxpayer dollars into Ukraine in attempt to influence the outcome.
We
do not know exactly how many millions or tens of millions of
dollars the United States government spent on the presidential election
in Ukraine. We do know that much of that money was targeted to assist
one particular candidate, and that through a series of cut-out non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) both American and Ukrainian millions of
dollars ended up in support of the presidential candidate, Viktor
Yushchenko.
Let
me add that I do not think we should be supporting either
of the candidates. While I am certainly no supporter of Viktor Yushchenko,
I am not a supporter of his opponent, Viktor Yanukovich, either.
Simply, it is none of our business who the Ukrainian people select
to be their president. And, if they feel the vote was not fair,
it is up to them to work it out.
How
did this one-sided US funding in Ukraine come about? While I am
afraid we may have seen only the tip of the iceberg, one part that
we do know thus far is that the US government, through the US Agency
for International Development (USAID), granted millions of dollars
to the Poland-America-Ukraine Cooperation Initiative (PAUCI), which
is administered by the US-based Freedom House.
PAUCI
then sent US Government funds to numerous Ukrainian non-governmental
organizations (NGOs). This would be bad enough and would in itself
constitute meddling in the internal affairs of a sovereign nation.
But, what is worse is that many of these grantee organizations in
Ukraine are blatantly in favor of presidential candidate Viktor
Yushchenko.
Consider
the Ukrainian NGO International Center for Policy Studies. It is
an organization funded by the U.S. government through PAUCI. On
its Web site, we discover that this NGO was founded by George Soros'
Open Society Institute. And further on we can see that Viktor Yushchenko
himself sits on the advisory board!
And
this NGO is not the only one the US government funds that is openly
supportive of Viktor Yushchenko. The Western Ukraine Regional Training
Center, as another example, features a prominent USAID logo on one
side of its website's front page and an orange ribbon of the candidate
Yushchenko's party and movement on the other. By their proximity,
the message to Ukrainian readers is clear: the US government supports
Yushchenko.
The
Center for Political and Law Reforms, another Ukrainian NGO funded
by the US government, features a link at the top of its website's
front page to Viktor Yushchenko's personal website. Yushchenko's
picture is at the top of this US government funded website.
This
May, the Virginia-based private management consultancy Development
Associates, Inc., was awarded $100 million by the US government
"for strengthening national legislatures and other deliberative
bodies worldwide." According to the organization's website, several
million dollars from this went to Ukraine in advance of the elections.
As
I have said, this may only be the tip of the iceberg. There may
be many more such organizations involved in this twisted tale.
It
is clear that a significant amount of US taxpayer dollars went to
support one candidate in Ukraine. Recall how most of us felt when
it became known that the Chinese government was trying to funnel
campaign funding to a US presidential campaign. This foreign funding
of American elections is rightly illegal. Yet, it appears that that
is exactly what we are doing abroad. What we do not know, however,
is just how much US government money was spent to influence the
outcome of the Ukrainian election.
Dozens
of organizations are granted funds under the PAUCI program alone,
and this is only one of many programs that funneled dollars into
Ukraine. We do not know how many millions of US taxpayer dollars
the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) sent to Ukraine through
NED's National Democratic Institute and International Republican
Institute. Nor do we know how many other efforts, overt or covert,
have been made to support one candidate over the other in Ukraine.
That
is what I find so disturbing: there are so many cut-out organizations
and sub-grantees that we have no idea how much US government money
was really spent on Ukraine, and most importantly how it
was spent. Perhaps the several examples of blatant partisan support
that we have been able to uncover are but an anomaly. I believe
Congress and the American taxpayers have a right to know. I believe
we urgently need an investigation by the Government Accounting Office
into how much US government money was spent in Ukraine and exactly
how it was spent. I would hope very much for the support of Chairman
Hyde, Chairman Lugar, Deputy Assistant Secretary Tefft, and my colleagues
on the Committee in this request.
President
Bush is absolutely correct: elections in Ukraine should be free
of foreign influence. It is our job here and now to discover just
how far we have violated this very important principle, and to cease
any funding of political candidates or campaigns henceforth.
December
9, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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