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References
1.
1 Post-Postup , no. 44, 9-15 December 1994.
2.
2 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 12, 23-29 March 1996.
3.
3 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 26, 29 June-1 July 1996.
4.
4 Golos Ukrainy , 27 June 1996.
5.
5 John Borawski, `The OSCE: In Search of Cooperative Security', Security Dialogue , vol. 27, no. 4, December 1996, p. 405.
6.
6 This is an unofficial committee, formed in 1993, lobbying for Ukraine in the USA. The committee is headed from the US side by Zbigniew Brzezinski, Henry Kissinger and George Soros, and is thought of as greatly significant by the Ukrainian leadership.
7.
7 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 41, 12-18 October 1996.
8.
8 F. Stephen Larrabee, `Ukraine's Balancing Act', Survival , vol. 38, no. 2, Summer 1996, p. 148.
9.
9 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 14, 6-12 April 1996.
10.
10 Interview with Boris Tarasyuk in Transition , 28 July 1995.
11.
11 Zerkalo Nedely , 12-18 October 1996.
12.
12 See Eberhardt Hayken, `Na holovnykh napryamakh spivrobnitstva' [On the Main Directions of Cooperation], Polityka i Chas , no. 12, December 1996, pp. 4-9.
13.
13 Randall L. Schweller, `Bandwagoning for Profit', in Michael E. Brown, Sean M. Lynn-Jones & Steven E. Miller, eds, The Perils of Anarchy-Contemporary Realism and International Security (London: MIT Press, 1995), p. 257.
14.
14 Tarasyuk, note 10, 28 July 1995.
15.
15 Schweller, note 13, p. 273.
16.
16 Ibid., p. 276.
17.
17 Elina Nesterenko, `NATO raskryvaet svoi sekrety' [NATO Reveals Its Secrets], Vseukrainskie Vedomosti , 5 March 1996.
18.
18 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 41, 12-18 October 1996.
19.
19 Kievskie Vedomosti , 3 May 1997.
20.
20 Vseukrainskie Vedomosti , 15 May 1997.
21.
21 Vesukrainskie Vedomosti , 26 July 1996.
22.
22 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 24, 15-21 June 1996.
23.
23 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 37, 14-20 September 1996.
24.
24 Dmytro Pavlychko, `Yevropa vidchula shch vona bilsha nizh zdavalos' [Europe Experienced She Was Larger Than She Had Realized], Viche , no. 8, November 1992, p. 141.
25.
25 Volodymyr Horbulin, `Nasha meta, nasha dolya' [Our Goal Is Our Destiny], Polityka i Chas , no. 1, January 1996, p. 3.
26.
26 Romania was the only country besides Russia to make territorial claims on Ukraine. In 1940, as a result of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, the Red Army moved into Romania and annexed several territories to the Soviet Union. These territories were Northern Bukovyna, the northernmost part of Bessarabia and the Hertsa area (these areas now constitute the Chernivtsi oblast ); Southern Bessarabia (now the southernmost part of Odessa oblast ); and little Serpent Island, just off both countries' Black Sea coast, reported to contain rich oil and gas deposits. On 24 June 1991 the Romanian parliament condemned the annexation, and in November both the Romanian government and parliament protested against the former Romanian territories' participation in the Ukrainian independence referendum. The signing of a friendship treaty between Romania and Ukraine was delayed for many years, largely because of Romanian unwillingness to accept officially the 1940 territorial losses.
27.
27 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 49, 7-13 December 1996.
28.
28 Zerkalo Nedely , no. 23, 8-14 June 1996.
29.
29 Rabochaya Gazeta , 18 September 1996.
30.
30 Figure given by Thomas Pickering, who was US ambassador to Russia until November 1996, in an interview with the Russian weekly Moskovskie Novosti , no. 44, 3-10 November 1996.
31.
31 Carroll Bogert, `Newfound Sweethearts', Newsweek , 4 November 1996, p. 25.
32.
32 See Segodnya , 16 May 1997.
