It appears that negotiations have begun in the Ukraine under (heavy) EU/OSCE mediation. Probably a good thing, but as stated below, I think it’s of limited relevance. The only result of negotiations that would have decisive effect would be if the government agreed to resign or to a solution equivalent to their resignation (for example,…

Read More Negotiating – and burning the files…

The Guardian covers Tony Blair’s much-blogged “text conversation” set up by a mobile phone company. Just like most articles about this, it entirely misses an important point by sniggering about Blair’s familiarity or otherwise with technology. What I find more worrying is his evident lack of familiarity with his own policy. In the text of…

Read More Prime Minister apparently ignorant of own policy

The Department of Work & Pensions (for non-UK readers, the government department that administers Britain’s social security system) has confirmed what everyone knows about the government’s technological blind spot by throwing up what might be Britain’s biggest-ever computer failure. It all started when they tried to update from Win2K to Windows XP…..then, before they knew…

Read More Government….Computers……heh heh heh heh…..

Scott Clark in Kiev has this to say about the dynamics of the revolution: “So will Yanukovych be sworn in today? I suspect he will be. There is an authority vacuum out there right now which is being filled more and more by Yuschenko standing at the head of the multitudes on the street. Kuchma…

Read More Foreign Notes – Seizing the symbols of authority

Just to revisit a past post on the Ukrainian perhaps-revolution, I think I ought to make myself a little clearer. What I meant by a “slow rot” as the government’s legitimacy or authority is eroded doesn’t exclude dramatic change. What I meant was a distinction between a coup de theatre (or indeed coup d’etat), for…

Read More Ukraine: Perhaps a Slow Rot And a Speedy End