Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Comedian vs. Putin

Ukraine’s next president has hands full with ex-spy.

- YURAS KARMANAU AND VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

KIEV, Ukraine — Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s landslide victory in Ukraine’s presidenti­al election has thrust a comedian and political novice into the middle of the most dangerous flash point between Moscow and the West since the end of the Cold War.

Whether Zelenskiy is any match at all for Vladimir Putin, a canny and ruthless KGB veteran who has led Russia for nearly 20 years, remains to be seen.

Zelenskiy, who played an accidental

president in a hugely popular sitcom but has no real political background, has vowed to keep Ukraine on its pro-Western course. At the same time, he has pledged to quickly reach out to Moscow to negotiate an end to the five years of fighting in Ukraine’s industrial east against Russian-backed separatist­s, a conflict that has killed more than 13,000 people.

Arkady Moshes, an expert on Russia and Ukraine with the Finnish Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs, said the Kremlin may try to exploit Zelenskiy’s lack of political experience.

Moscow “can, on the one hand, offer him something and basically outplay him diplomatic­ally, and on the other hand threaten Zelenskiy as an inexperien­ced commander-in-chief with the destabiliz­ation of the situation in the east,” he said.

With nearly all ballots counted in Sunday’s election, the 41-year-old Zelenskiy won 73 percent of the vote to President Petro Poroshenko’s 24 percent, reflecting disillusio­nment with the old elite amid economic woes, deep-seated corruption and the war.

Russia annexed Crimea in 2014 and has fomented the fighting in Ukraine’s industrial heartland in a bid to maintain its influence in the country and keep the former Soviet state from joining the European Union and NATO. NATO doesn’t welcome nations with unsettled territoria­l conflicts.

The question is whether Zelenskiy will have any more success than his predecesso­r in halting the hostilitie­s.

“Everything will depend on Putin — whether the Kremlin will continue to use the conflict in the east to put the brakes on Kiev’s movement toward the EU and NATO,” said Volodymyr Fesenko, head of the Penta Center, a Kiev-based think tank.

Russia paid a steep price for its actions in Ukraine, with the U.S. and the EU responding with sanctions that have limited Moscow’s access to global financial markets and restricted imports of key technologi­es. The Kremlin may now be eager to engage in talks with Zelenskiy in the hope that a lull in the fighting will pave the way for the lifting of Western restrictio­ns.

On the campaign trail, Poroshenko warned over and over that Zelenskiy could be easy prey for the steely Russian leader. But Zelenskiy could also face powerful resistance at home.

A case in point: Zelenskiy has said he will push for implementa­tion of the 2015 Minsk peace deal, the internatio­nally brokered agreement that would enable Russia to maintain influence in Ukraine by allowing broad autonomy for the rebel east. But the Ukrainian public has made it clear it opposes any concession­s to Russia.

During the campaign, Zelenskiy said he would continue efforts to join the EU and NATO but emphasized that becoming part of the alliance should be approved by a nationwide referendum.

Zelenskiy, who comes from Ukraine’s Russian-speaking east and spent years working in Moscow during his entertainm­ent career, has many friends in Russia’s artistic community who were excited by his election.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev welcomed Zelenskiy’s election, saying, “There is still a chance for Ukraine to improve its relations with Russia.”

Zelenskiy has also pledged to try to integrate people in separatist-controlled areas into Ukraine — a promise that contrasted with the policy of Poroshenko, who made it extremely difficult for those living in the rebel regions to get pensions and other benefits.

In addition, he has vowed to seek a quick release of Ukrainian prisoners held by separatist­s and Ukrainian sailors seized by Russia during a naval incident in the Black Sea in November.

Some observers speculated the Kremlin may release the sailors to create goodwill for future talks. Asked about that, Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov was noncommitt­al, saying the seamen have yet to face trial. They are accused of violating the Russian border, charges they deny.

Still, members of Zelenskiy’s team were vague about how he will proceed in trying to negotiate peace in the east.

“There is no magic wand,” Oleksandr Danylyuk, a former finance minister who worked as a campaign adviser for Zelenskiy, told The Associated Press. “We will proceed step by step.”

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 ?? AP/VADIM GHIRDA ?? Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko stands with supporters who gathered Monday in Kiev to thank him for his service. Poroshenko lost to Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Sunday’s election.
AP/VADIM GHIRDA Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko stands with supporters who gathered Monday in Kiev to thank him for his service. Poroshenko lost to Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Sunday’s election.
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Zelenskiy

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