Article contents
Ukraine and the Yugoslav Conflict
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Extract
Even before gaining independence in December 1991 from the former USSR, Ukraine had supported Slovenia and Croatia's drive to independence from the former Yugoslavia. In May 1991, Croatian President Franjo Tudjman paid an official visit to Ukraine where then parliamentary speaker Leonid Kravchuk expressed sympathy with Croatia's desire for independence. Tudjman pointed out how Ukraine's seat at the United Nations had given it a head start in obtaining international recognition of its independent status. On 12 December 1991, twelve days after the Ukrainian referendum on independence, Kyiv became one of the first states to diplomatically recognise Croatia and Slovenia; and further, it announced its readiness to open embassies in both countries. Ukraine was the first member of the U.N. to recognise Croatia; the second and third countries, Slovenia and Lithuania, were not members of the U.N. when they recognised Croatia.
- Type
- Part III: International Reactions to Yugoslavia's Disintegration
- Information
- Nationalities Papers , Volume 25 , Issue 3: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia: Inevitable or Avoidable? , September 1997 , pp. 587 - 600
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1997 Association for the Study of Nationalities
References
Notes
1. Ustina Markus, “Ukraine and the Yugoslav Conflict,” RFE/RL Research Report, Vol. 2, No. 30, 23 July 1993, pp. 36–37.Google Scholar
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3. Until 1994 the majority of Western academics, journalists and government officials all shared the view that Ukraine and Russia were indeed one and the same and that Ukrainian indepedence was a “temporary phenomenon.” Sooner or later, therefore, Ukraine would return to its “normal” state of affairs as a satellite of Russia, or it would be re-incorporated. This view is still held by the majority of Russian public opinion.Google Scholar
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61. Interview with Mykhailo Honchar, Senior Research Fellow, National Institute for Strategic Studies (National Security Council), Kyiv, 29 November 1995.Google Scholar
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