Playing both sides
Poroshenko, 48, is soft-spoken and perceived in Ukraine as competent and levelheaded, the analysts say.
He aligned himself early this year with the demonstrators at Maidan Square in Kiev, who want Ukraine to develop closer ties with the West. But he also served in the government of pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych.
He supports stronger ties with Europe but wants to heal the rift with Russia.
"We must build a relationship with our neighbor," he said this week — quickly stressing that Ukrainian security must come first, and that a healthy relationship with Russia depends on a strong Ukraine.
He promises to decentralize power and give the country's regions greater power to manage their own money and other matters, which could help build support in the troubled east.
"Poroshenko is by nature a centrist," said Herbst, the former ambassador. "There are no radical departures with him. He will not be perceived as an alien imposition on the east. That's a good thing."
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Dealing with Russia
Herbst said Poroshenko would have two paths to solve the Russia problem.
One would be to make a deal with Putin, but that would probably require Ukraine to surrender its aspirations for closer economic ties with Europe. Another would be to strengthen the police and security forces and quell the rebellion in the east.
That would leave the Kremlin with two choices — up the ante by sending troops into Ukraine, inviting much harsher sanctions from the West, or cool it and deal with the new government.
In other words, which matters more: a functioning economy or another piece of Ukraine?
"At some point Russia is going to have to deal with Ukraine," said William Pomeranz, deputy director for the Kennan Institute, a Russia-focused group at the Wilson Center, a nonpartisan policy organization.
"Better that it be a stable Ukraine as opposed to a Ukraine that's in the midst of civil war," he said.
After the election
Of course, Poroshenko's success depends in part on a smooth election Sunday. If the separatists succeed in severely depressing the vote in the east, it would play to Putin's suggestion that Ukraine is deeply unstable.
And the new president will have a host of problems at home, including the economic meltdown and a Parliament that is sharply divided and rife with reports of corruption.
No walk through the candy store for the man called the Chocolate King.
"He's a brave man for taking it on. That's for sure," Pomeranz said. "This would be a remarkable transformation."
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
First published May 23 2014, 10:25 AM
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