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2121, 14 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko: Ukraine and Poland will always be reliable partners
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1520, 11 July 2008
Verkhovna Rada fails to support resolution on dismissal of Tymoshenko government
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1410, 10 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko summons President, parliamentary factions' leaders and extraparliamentary political forces to organize and hold all-Ukrainian council, proposed by Lytvyn bloc
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1712, 26 June 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko: Within a year Government will reform coal industry
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1515, 26 June 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko promises to continue repaying lost savings in the Soviet Oshchadbank
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1645, 25 June 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko promises to defend the Black Sea shelf
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2016, 19 June 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko: President Yushchenko should make an effort to preserve the democratic coalition
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1139, 27 March 2008
Brand Tymoshenko goes global. The iconic PM’s international image. An article in Business Ukraine
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1236, 26 March 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko sums up the first 100 days of her government
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1051, 19 March 2008
Prime Minister of Ukraine Yulia Tymoshenko states about GDP growth, real incomes of population and inflation reduction
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Meeting with Federal Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel 21 July 2008
21 July 2008

Working visit to Ternopil oblast’ 17 July 2008
17 July 2008

Working visit to Ternopil oblast’ 17 July 2008
17 July 2008

Working visit to Ternopil oblast’ 17 July 2008
17 July 2008

Meeting with Federal Chancellor of Austria Alfred Gusenbauer 15 July 2008
15 July 2008

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Yulia Tymoshenko, Milton Friedman and the liberation of the peasants

1723, 1 November 2007    // Kyiv Post
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Of all the different planks of Yulia Tymoshenko’s campaign platform, the issue of military reform, most notably getting rid of the draft, is the one that is most likely to have the biggest effect on Ukrainians’ lives.

Simply put, if she is successful in ending the forced conscription of young men into the Ukrainian army, Yulia will have liberated 50,000 men a year from a one-year term, sentenced for the simple crime of being Ukrainian.

Sadly, it seems that the proposal to end conscription is going to be bogged down in political infighting.

The Our Ukraine political bloc is claiming that it would be too costly to end the draft before 2011. Even worse, the Party of Regions has connected ending the draft to a conspiracy by those trying to force Ukraine to join NATO.

At a recent press conference,Party of Regions member Valeriy Konovaliuk stated: “The policy of the wholesale reduction of the armed forces has led to its complete degradation and absolutely total lack of combat readiness. To a large degree, these processes have taken their cue from the ideologies of those foreign strategists who have seen Ukraine as part of NATO at any cost, and who have understood that the less significant the [Ukrainian] armed forces, the more vigorously those policies will be pursued.”

All of them are overlooking the most important reason to end the draft in Ukraine. As Milton Friedman, the great economist and political thinker pointed out, there is simply no justification for a democratic government to force conscription on its young men during peacetime. As he wrote in “Capitalism and Freedom,” “the appropriate free market arrangement is volunteer military forces; which is to say, hiring men to serve. There is no justification for not paying whatever price is necessary to attract the required number of men. Present arrangements are inequitable and arbitrary, and seriously interfere with the freedom of young men.”

Everything that Milton Friedman wrote about the draft in reference to the United States in the 1960s and 70s resonates deeply in reference to the draft here in Ukraine. The present status of conscription in Ukraine is simply a substantial forced tax on the least educated citizens.

As is well-documented in Ukraine today, the only people serving in the army are the poorest Ukrainians with the fewest alternatives.

It is telling that neither Viktor Yanukovych Jr., nor Andriy Yushchenko, the son of President Viktor Yushchenko, served in the army. In fact, I would challenge you to find any politician’s child who did serve.

As for Yanukovych Jr., his ticket out of the service was a supposed spine injury that he suffered as a young boy. That near-crippling childhood spine injury, however, did not stop Yanukovych Jr. from listing wakeboarding and football as his favorite hobbies on his resume on dovidka.com.ua.

Bribing doctors for a note that will excuse a young man from the service is a widespread practice in Ukraine for those who have the money to do so, but it is not an option for the country’s poorest young men, who by-and-large fill the ranks of Ukraine’s armed forces.

Meanwhile, the example of Yushchenko’s son shows that anyone with enough money to attend a university or other institution of higher learning with a military faculty attached to it can walk out of that university with the rank of second lieutenant after being on its register of cadets for two years without ever marching a step in the rank-and-file armed forces.

Both methods of avoiding the service are a free pass out of forced labor.

Meanwhile, the poorest, least educated young men are denied freedom and forced to pay a tax on their meager earnings by working basically for free. To quote Friedman again, “When a young man is forced to serve at $45 a week, including the cost of his keep, of his uniforms, and his dependency allowances, and there are many civilian opportunities available to him at something like $100 a week, he is paying $55 a week in an implicit tax.”

Of course, this does not even include the tax that is paid by society. In addition to what is paid by a young conscript, Friedman pointed out, “if you were to add to those taxes in kind, the costs imposed on universities and colleges; of seating, housing, and entertaining young men who would otherwise be doing productive work; if you were to add to that the costs imposed on industry by the fact that they can only offer young men who are in danger of being drafted stopgap jobs, and cannot effectively invest money in training them; if you were to add to that the costs imposed on individuals of a financial kind by their marrying earlier or having children at an earlier stage, and so on; if you were to add all these up, there is no doubt at all in my mind that the cost of a volunteer force, correctly calculated, would be very much smaller than the amount we are now spending in manning our armed forces.”

Going even further, in the three decades since the United States got rid of its draft and switched to a professional army, the military has become one of the most important paths for career advancement for the poor in America. By forcing the military to compete for young men in a competitive environment, it has forced the military to offer training, career advancement and fair pay. So, instead of it being a short period of forced labor, it acts as a key step in the career ladder for thousands of individuals with lesser opportunities.

By ending conscription, Ukraine will open opportunity to its poorest citizens, save money in its military budget, improve its military capabilities, give its economy a boost by bringing more people to productive labor, and most importantly, free its citizens from forced labor.

This seems like one idea that everyone can support.

By Jed Sunden, the publisher of the Kyiv Post.

Published on Oct 31 2007

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Press review
1139, 27 March 2008 Brand Tymoshenko goes global. The iconic PM’s international image. An article in Business Ukraine
1151, 14 March 2008 Ukraine and Russia reach deal to end gas deadlock. The article in The Financial Times
1259, 8 February 2008 Successful Start to Ukraine's New Government. An article in "The Moscow Times"
1207, 30 November 2007 Tymoshenko closer to PM post. An article in Financial Times
1605, 19 November 2007 Take lead, Yushchenko. Editorial in Kyiv Post
1611, 9 November 2007 Yulia Tymoshenko is recognized the most influential woman of Ukraine
1617, 6 November 2007 Ukraine still waits for government
0938, 30 October 2007 Yulia Tymoshenko is acknowledged the most influential representative of elite of Dnipropetrovs’k area
1356, 25 October 2007 Tymoshenko the real winner of Ukraine's 2007 election. Article in the "Eurasia Daily"
1602, 12 October 2007 Yulia Tymoshenko may repudiate Russia-Ukraine gas agreement. A publication in Pravda.ru

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Video & Audio
21 July 2008
About results of meeting with Federal Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel
13 July 2008
Interview for ICTV (about voting in parliament for dismissal of Government)
11 July 2008
Report of Y.Tymoshenko to parliament
9 July 2008
Y.Tymoshenko's press-conference about the new budget
4 June 2008
Y.Tymoshenko's press-conference
29 May 2008
The special project "Duel" on TRC "Ukraine"
20 May 2008
"Time of interview" with Y.Tymoshenko ("5 channel")
14 May 2008
Y.Tymoshenko's briefing
13 May 2008
Briefing of Yulia Tymoshenko (reasons why BYuT blocks Parliament's work)
12 May 2008
Press-conference (about shelf fields)
Last news
1120, 24 July 2008
Prime Minister instructs to take measures on mitigating hurricane consequences
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1157, 23 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko: Naftohaz of Ukraine to pump gas into depositories this year for the first time
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1047, 23 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko plans to turn down gas intermediaries in the nearest future
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1032, 23 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko: There will be no shock or stress over gas
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1454, 22 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko notes high level of cooperation between Naftohaz of Ukraine and Gazprom
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1256, 22 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko asks President and Speaker to speed up passage of investment bills
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1153, 22 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko forecasts deflation in July
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1734, 21 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko and Angela Merkel discuss strategy for deepening bilateral cooperation between Ukraine and Germany (updated)
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1825, 17 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko warns against creation of RosUkrEnergo-3
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1712, 17 July 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko: Ukrainian legislation doesn’t foresee alternative budget laws
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