[UNC] has the right to represent its views of the future of the Ukraine and to express this in declarations and manifestos.
Apart from Shandruk, Volodymyr Kubijovyč, the head of the Ukrainian Central Committee [pl; ru; uk] (UCC), and Oleksandr Semenenko were appointed his deputies.
However, the committee received relatively small support from OUN, as the "Melnykites" didn't have a political monopoly over UNC and tried to "maintain a clean moral slate", while Bandera already had the Ukrainian Supreme Liberation Council, which was also oriented for cooperation with the United States and Britain and conveyed a "democratic" image.
However, the Galizien division remained under tactical control of Nazi Germany until the final surrender.
[5] Other goals were to create a strong Ukrainian émigré base by gaining new supporters from the evacuees and Ukrainian laborers in the Third Reich by providing welfare and aid over them and preventing their return to Soviet Ukraine; to prevent weakening and decreasing the OUN while strengthening a non-OUN nationalist movement; to make sure Ukrainians remaining in Germany would not be treated by a future German government as Nazi collaborators or stateless people who could be simply evicted by getting involved in the impending Cold War.