'Leonid Danylovych Kuchma' (; born
August 9,
1938) was the second
President of
Ukraine from
July 19,
1994, to
January 23,
2005.
Early life
Kuchma was born in
Chaikyne village of
Chernihiv Oblast (
Ukrainian SSR). His father was killed in a battlefield during the
World War II in
1944. Kuchma attended
Dnipropetrovsk University and graduated with a degree in
rocket engineering. He moved into senior management posts of the
Yuzhmash industrial company in
Dnipropetrovsk, eventually becoming its top executive, as well as in the
Communist Party elite. As such, Kuchma played an important role in
Soviet strategic missile and
space rocket programs.
Some researchers believe that Kuchma's earlier career was significantly boosted by his marriage to
Lyudmila Tumanova, the daughter of a local
CPSU chief.
Kuchma was an amateur
guitar player in his younger years. He was also known for his skill at the complicated
card game preferans.
Political career
From
1990 to
1992 Kuchma was a member of the
Ukrainian parliament (Committee on Defence and State Security), and became
Prime Minister of Ukraine in
1992.
Kuchma resigned from this position in
September 1993 to successfully run for the
presidency in 1994 on a platform to boost the economy by restoring economic relations with Russia. He also declared his intentions to implement economic reforms.
Early in his presidency, Kuchma arranged a $730 million loan from the
IMF, signed a "Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation, and Partnership" with Russia, and endorsed a round of talks with the
CIS. Additionally, he referred to
Russian as "an official language." He signed a special partnership agreement with
NATO and even raised the possibility of membership of the alliance. He was re-elected in
1999 to his second term.
After Kuchma's popularity at home and abroad sank as he became mired in corruption scandals, he turned to
Russia as his new ally, saying Ukraine needed a "multivector" foreign policy that balanced eastern and western interests.
Opponents accused him of involvement in the killing in
2000 of journalist
Georgiy Gongadze (see also
SBU, "
Cassette Scandal",
Mykola Mel'nychenko), which he has always denied. They also blamed him for restrictions on press freedom. Kuchma is believed to have played a key role in sacking the
Cabinet of
Viktor Yushchenko by
Verkhovna Rada on
April 26,
2001.
Kuchma's
Prime Minister from
2002 until early
January 2005 was
Viktor Yanukovych, after Kuchma dismissed
Anatoliy Kinakh, his previous appointee.
Role in the Crisis of 2004

President Kuchma, in 2004
Kuchma's role in the
election's crisis of 2004 is not entirely clear. After the second round on
November 22,
2004, it appeared that Yanukovych had won the election by fraud, which caused the opposition and independent observers to dispute the results, leading to the
Orange Revolution.
Kuchma was urged by Yanukovych and
Viktor Medvedchuk (the head of the presidential office) to declare a
state of emergency and hold the inauguration of Yanukovych. He denied the request by admittedly stating in a phone conversation with Russian President
Vladimir Putin that he refused to pass the government into the hands of an alleged Donetsk criminal. Later, Yanukovych publicly accused Kuchma of a betrayal.
Nevertheless, Kuchma refused to officially dismiss Prime Minister Yanukovych after the parliament passed a
motion of no confidence against the Cabinet on
December 1,
2004.
Soon after, Kuchma left the country. He returned to Ukraine in March
2005.
Post-Presidency
In
2005, the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s office instigated criminal proceedings against Kuchma and members of his former administration in connection with the murder of journalist
Georgiy R. Gongadze.
[1]
In 2005 Kuchma started to smoke, first appearing with
cigarettes and
cigars publicly. It is a return to the habit he quit back in 1992.
[2]
Policiticians closely associated with Kuchma
Aides and advisors that became public figures after or before
★
Volodymyr Horbulin - personal friend, aide, later Head of the
National Security and Defense Council
★
Volodymyr Lytvyn - long-term first aide, later Head of
Presidential Administration, then
Speaker of the
Verkhovna Rada (parliament)
★
Viktor Medvedchuk -
business oligarch, then First Vice Speaker of Verkhovna Rada, Head of Presidential Administration in 2001-2004
★
Dmytro Tabachnyk - manager of the Kuchma's first successful
election campaign, later Head of Presidential Administration, then Vice Prime Minister (in cabinet of
Yanukovych)
Influential statesmen
★
Leonid Derkach - personal friend, Head of the
Security Service of Ukraine
★
Yuri Kravchenko -
Minister of Internal Affairs (
police chief), ''committed suicide after the fall of Kuchma's regime''
★
Oleksandr Omelchenko - long-term governor and mayor of the
capital city of
Kiev
Business oligarchs and managers of important state-owned companies
★
Ihor Bakai -
business oligarch, later head of
Naftohaz Ukrainy national gas and oil company, then Head of the State Accommodation Department, ''escaped to Russia after the fall of Kuchma's regime, refusing to ever return permanently''
★
Heorhiy Kirpa - long-term head of the
Ukrzaliznytsia national
railways, then Minister of Transportation, ''committed suicide after the fall of Kuchma's regime''
★
Viktor Pinchuk - second son-in-law,
business oligarch in control of several important media
Related Literature
★ Sochor, Zenovia A. 1994. ''Political Culture and Foreign Policy: Elections in Ukraine 1994.'' Printed in: Tismaneanu, Vladmir (ed.). 1995. ''Political Culture and Civil Society in Russia and the New States of Eurasia.'' ISBN 1-56324-364-4. pp.208-224.
See also
★
President of Ukraine
★
Government of Ukraine
★
Prime Minister of Ukraine
External link
★
''Yushchenko Won the Competition of Personalities'' (Kuchma's 2005 interview for Russian ''Vremia Novostey'' newspaper)