The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Leonid Kravchuk, first president of independent Ukraine, dies at 88

May 11, 2022 at 7:05 p.m. EDT
Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk, right, joins hands with President Bill Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin after signing a nuclear disarmament agreement in 1994. (Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty Images)
6 min

Leonid Kravchuk, a onetime Communist apparatchik who became the first president of an independent Ukraine, playing a central role in the dissolution of the Soviet Union and relinquishing his country’s nuclear weapons stockpile in the aftermath of the Cold War, died May 10. He was 88.

His death was reported by the Ukrinform news agency. Other details were not immediately available, but Mr. Kravchuk had been in poor health after undergoing a heart surgery last year, according to the Associated Press.

With a population of more than 50 million, Ukraine was the second largest of the U.S.S.R.’s 15 republics and, with its declaration of independence in 1991, became a pivotal player in the final days of the Soviet era.

Mr. Kravchuk reached the height of his power during that period, winning Ukraine’s first popular election in 1991 and establishing a tradition of the peaceful transfer of power when he stepped down after losing a reelection bid in 1994.

His life was bookended by war. After World War II began when he was 5, he lost his father, who served in the Red Army, and witnessed the murder of Jewish people during the Holocaust. In the final months of his life he again saw his country battered by war, with Russia invading Ukraine in late February under President Vladimir Putin.

Announcing Mr. Kravchuk’s death amid the ongoing conflict, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky hailed his leadership during “crisis moments, when the future of the whole country may depend on the courage of one man.”

Mr. Kravchuk was by all accounts a masterful politician — a person who, in the phrasing of an old Ukrainian expression, could steal a chicken without upsetting the farmer. A joke circulated that he had no need for an umbrella when it rained; he simply skirted between the raindrops.

Trained as an economist, he served during the Soviet era as head of the propaganda department within the Ukrainian Communist Party’s Central Committee and as chairman of the legislative body known as the Ukrainian Supreme Soviet, a role that effectively made him leader of the republic.

But amid a growing nationalist movement in the late 1980s and early ’90s, Mr. Kravchuk evolved into a forceful advocate for Ukrainian independence.

“The metamorphosis of Leonid M. Kravchuk is something even a butterfly might find impressive,” wrote New York Times reporter Serge Schmemann. “After more than 30 years as a plodding Communist ideologue conditioned to stomp on any manifestations of nationalism, he has abruptly burst forth as the first popularly elected national leader of Ukraine, dedicated to leading it out of the Soviet Union.”

Asked if his transformation was at least partly motivated by political opportunism, Mr. Kravchuk replied, “A man cannot keep the same views all his life. It’s a natural process, but I’ve only changed once.”

He cited his grandchildren and what he said was their fear of going to school when he was a top-ranking Communist official. “I wanted them to be proud of me,” he remarked, “not ashamed.”

Mr. Kravchuk resigned from the Ukrainian Politburo after Communist hard-liners mounted a failed coup against Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in August 1991. Less than four months later, on Dec. 1, more than 90 percent of Ukrainians voted for independence. Roughly 60 percent of voters selected him for president.

“We may be rich and we may be poor,” he declared after his election. “We may be mighty and we may be weak. But I promise you that we will be masters in our own home: We will be a state.”

Days later, Mr. Kravchuk joined Russian President Boris Yeltsin and Belarusian leader Stanislav Shushkevich in signing the Minsk agreement, which declared that “the U.S.S.R. has ceased to exist as a subject of international law and a geopolitical reality.” (Shushkevich died May 4 at 87, leaving Mr. Kravchuk as the agreement’s last surviving signatory. Yeltsin died in 2007 at 76.)

Stanislav Shushkevich, who led Belarus to independence, dies at 87

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the United States sought to consolidate the country’s nuclear weapons in Russia to avoid what Serhii Plokhy, a historian of Ukraine, described as a “Yugoslavia with nukes” — a region rife with political and ethnic tensions where any conflict would be drastically heightened by the presence of nuclear weapons.

Mr. Kravchuk agreed to the transfer of Ukraine’s nuclear arsenal, the world’s third-largest, in exchange for security assurances, an agreement later formalized in the Budapest Memorandum of 1994.

According to Plokhy, Mr. Kravchuk had little choice but to comply because he needed the political and economic backing of the United States. He “did the best he could under the circumstances to negotiate,” Plokhy said in an interview, but he “didn’t have much place to maneuver.”

Mr. Kravchuk expressed immediate concerns about the consequences of the agreement. “If tomorrow Russia goes into Crimea,” he was said to have remarked, referring to the Ukrainian region that Putin annexed in 2014, “no one will raise an eyebrow.”

“By its terms, Ukraine forfeited an inherited Soviet nuclear arsenal in exchange for Western pledges of aid and ‘assurances’ from Russia, the U.S. and the U.K. that its borders would remain intact,” George E. Bogden, a fellow at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, wrote in the Wall Street Journal in March. “Disarmament experts hailed the pact, but it invited Mr. Putin’s revanchism.”

Through his last days in office and beyond, Mr. Kravchuk argued that Ukraine could be a bulwark of democracy in Eastern Europe.

“Everyone should understand that Russia will never agree to be on the sidelines of the world,” he declared during a 1994 visit to the United States. “They could not renounce their 1,000-year history.”

“We can and want to allow the countries of the world the opportunity to stabilize and balance the situation in Europe,” he added. “We can open the doors of democracy to the East.”

Leonid Makarovych Kravchuk was born on Jan. 10, 1934, in the village of Velyky Zhityn, which was then part of Poland.

He studied at a technical school and joined the economics faculty at what is now the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, working as a teacher before entering politics.

Mr. Kravchuk was defeated in his presidential reelection campaign by Prime Minister Leonid Kuchma. Plokhy, a Harvard University professor and author of “The Last Empire: The Final Days of the Soviet Union,” described Mr. Kravchuk’s decision to allow a peaceful transfer of power as a “contribution … to the history of his homeland and the post-Soviet space as a whole.”

Mr. Kravchuk was married to Antonina Mikhailovna and had a son. A complete list of survivors was not immediately available.

Oleksii Reznikov, the Ukrainian defense minister, wrote in a tweet after Mr. Kravchuk’s death that “with his signature, the Evil Empire disintegrated.

“Thank you for the peaceful renewal of our Independence,” he continued. “We’re defending it now with weapons in our hands.”