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Ukraine appoints new ambassador to U.S.
Journal Staff Report

KYIV, Feb 25 - Ukraine named a former finance minister as ambassador to the United States on Thursday, a sign of its push to upgrade ties with Washington under President Joe Biden after it was sucked into an awkward role in Donald Trump's first impeachment, Reuters reported.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's office said he had appointed Oksana Markarova to focus on establishing "an effective dialogue" with the new administration, and to work with the U.S. Congress to strengthen bipartisan support for Ukraine.

Ukraine hopes to restore the strong backing from Washington it enjoyed early in its seven-year conflict with Russian-backed separatists. It also wants Washington's help securing badly needed international loans.

It was forced to keep the Trump administration at arms length from mid-2019, after a whistleblower reported a phone call in which then-President Trump asked Zelenskiy to find damaging information about Biden, and about Biden's son who had worked for a Ukrainian gas company.

Trump, a Republican, was impeached by the Democratic controlled House of Representatives for abuse of office over the affair, before being acquitted last year by the Republican-held Senate, the first of two impeachment trials.

Markarova, 44, led Ukraine's finance ministry from June 2018-March 2020, and earlier played a major role in talks with the International Monetary Fund and bondholders that resulted in the restructuring of $15 billion of Ukrainian sovereign debt.

The government believes that having her in Washington will help it reach an agreement with the IMF to unlock a $5 billion program approved last June. The IMF disbursed the first $2.1 billion but has delayed further loans on concerns over anti-corruption reforms.

Ukraine will have to make more progress on economic reforms before the International Monetary Fund can decide on resuming a $5 billion loan to the country, an IMF official said February 13.

The development was major setback for the government, which had been seeking to resume borrowing from the IMF no later than in March in order to be able to pay out more than $11 billion in foreign and domestic debts before end of June. (rt/tl/ez)




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