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Home»World»Ukraine corruption: Zelensky’s Western masters had better start looking for a new puppet
World

Ukraine corruption: Zelensky’s Western masters had better start looking for a new puppet

Press RoomBy Press RoomNovember 13, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read
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The “Servant of the People” is only serving his besties, and patience with him is running out

In all too many ways, what has happened to Ukraine, particularly since 2014, is a very sad story. Two things that are especially depressing are what its own “elites” and its so-called “supporters” in the West have done to the country.

Regarding the West, its contribution to Ukraine’s devastation has been to lure its leadership into sacrificing the country and its people in a proxy war. That proxy war, to make things even more absurd and futile, has long failed predictably, even if measured against its Western designers’ own selfish and hubristic aims: namely, to substantially weaken if not degrade Russia, or even subject it to the scourge of regime change.

Ukraine, in sum, has been literally bled almost dry in pursuit of a cynical and delusional strategy that has always privileged misconceived Western, not real Ukrainian interests. Ironically, what was meant to weaken Russia has made it stronger, while it is Ukraine that has been degraded, economically, geographically, and, last but not least, demographically.

And politically as well. This may surprise some observers, at least in the West, where the public has been deprived of truthful reporting on Ukraine’s domestic politics for years now. Yet the reality is that the country’s own “elites” are as brutally selfish and corrupt as ever. Yes, the last president who was not anti-Russian (he wasn’t “pro” either), Viktor Yanukovich, made himself a big fat regime change target with his pronounced if messy authoritarianism – mean lawfare against rivals included – and bombastic corruption. But no, nothing has changed.

At least not for the better. If anything, the current regime, under Vladimir Zelensky, is worse. And, as before, it is pervasive: while a favorite sport of the ultra-rich and well-connected, corruption also poisons the life of ordinary Ukrainians at every step. As a Ukrainian construction manager told Al Jazeera this summer, “What’s the point if I go back home and my family is surrounded by corruption everywhere […] Judges, officials, even schoolteachers all say, ‘Give, give, give.’” Yet unlike with hapless Yanukovich, Zelensky is, in the infamously candid American phrase, “our son of a bitch,” that is, the West’s. So, he lasts. For now.


That is where things get sticky. Because Ukraine is currently being shaken by a corruption scandal so humungous even Zelensky’s most deluded fanboys (for instance, Keith Kellogg in the US) and girls (say, Mette Frederiksen in Denmark) must find it hard to keep the faith. In what can only be described as Kiev’s new, improved Graftzilla monster, the country’s nuclear utility Energoatom has become the center of explosive revelations that reach up to the very top of the political hierarchy, Zelensky’s presidential office. It is likely that it is only a question of time until he himself will not only be deeply embroiled and damaged, as now, but facing direct accusations as well.

The gist of the mega-scandal is simple: a network of businessmen (really, gangsters) and politicians (really, gangsters) has used illegal control over Energoatom contracts to fleece anyone who wanted or had to do business with the strategically placed enterprise. As Ukrainian prosecutors have explained, the power of this Energoatom mafia permeated the company, ensuring “control over personnel decisions, procurement processes, and financial flows.” In fact, the management of a strategic enterprise … was carried out not by state officials, but by third parties who had no formal authority, [but] took on the role of ‘overseers’ or ‘shadow managers.’

None of this would have been possible without very close proximity to Zelensky and his fixer Andrey Yermak. The main capo of the Energoatom mafia was Timur Mindich (gangster nickname: “Karlson”), a close friend and media business partner of the ex-comedian president.

He was not just any friend: Mindich was the one who introduced Zelensky, then a mediocre – if profitably uninhibited – comedian and small-time businessman from the provinces to Igor Kolomoisky, one of Ukraine’s richest and most sleazy oligarchs.

Kolomoisky became Zelensky’s sponsor and facilitated his commercial and political rise. Yet while Kolomoisky has long been purged as no longer useful and annoyingly demanding, Mindich has stayed around. Until a few days ago, that is, when “the president’s purse” – Mindich’s other nickname – fled the country, clearly tipped off about his imminent come-uppance by someone high-up and well-informed.

“Karlson’s” crew included other characters with much oomph and colorful nicknames, such as the “Professor” (in the lead together with “Karlson”), “Rocket” and “Tenor” (hints of Tony Soprano there), or, as the public used to know these three gentlemen before (in order of appearance), the now-former Minister of Justice German Galushchenko, the former deputy head of the state property fund and then adviser to the energy minister, Igor Mironiuk, and the former prosecutor and security director of Energoatom, Dmitry Basov.


Russia was right: Nobody can ignore Kiev’s corruption now

Together with their accomplices, they ran an operation in which everyone dealing with Energoatom had to pay them a kickback of 10-15% of any given contract’s value. Those not willing or able to go along with the shake-down would be excluded by what the crew called the barrier, or “shlagbaum.” Financial transactions were supported by the kind services of “Sugarmen.”

In a first wave of arrests that will probably not be the last, the Ukrainian anti-corruption prosecutors have detained five suspects. They were aiming for six, but then, someone told Mindich to bolt, somehow. There are other suspects who are already abroad and out of reach.

The current political tally is impressive already: Galushchenko has resigned as Minister of Justice, and so has Energy Minister Svetlana Grinchuk.

This, clearly, is only the beginning – or perhaps rather escalation – of a great scandal. Ukrainians and all of us who care are certain to hear much more about it. Details abound even now. Yet they are not what is most important here. Instead, the true significance of the Energoatom mafia case that is now exploding is how immeasurably close it is to country leader and former boy wonder of the West Zelensky.

In Ukraine, it is obvious that the consequences for Zelensky will be dire. Western fantasists, such as the Telegraph author suggesting that this fiasco could still be an opportunity for the president-past-best-by-date, would provoke ridicule in Ukraine.

In reality, as Ukrainian news site Strana.ua strongly implies, Zelensky’s voice may well also be heard in the 1,000 hours of wiretap recordings that have brought down the Energoatom mafia. Not all the recordings have been released; and any featuring his voice would be held back for as long as possible or, maybe, forever. Or, at least, until he falls from power and his successors do the Ukrainian-”elite” thing and go after him with lawfare to distract from their own schemes.


Will Zelensky survive? Ukraine’s Western media backers react to the latest corruption scandal

Even without – or before – direct evidence of Zelensky’s immediate participation in his friend’s Mindich’s crimes, the persistent president has done plenty already to leave an extremely unpleasant impression. It was Zelensky, after all, who, just this summer, went after precisely the anti-corruption prosecutors who have been working on the Energoatom mafia case for over a year already. Even then, his critics suspected that Zelensky was desperately trying to stave off what has now happened. That in itself is, obviously, highly suspicious.

Zelensky, meanwhile, is continuing to ask his EU supporters for ever more money, including about €140 billion of frozen Russian assets. However, even before the Energoatom dirt really hit the fan, the European Commission had already signaled that its patience for Kiev’s hyper-corruption is running out. There may even be a connection between Western displeasure and the timing of the fresh arrests. Zelensky should worry about being set up for removal. The West made him; the West can undo him.

Even Zelensky stalwarts like former NATO figurehead Jens Stoltenberg and current EU de facto foreign minister Kaja Kallas are showing signs of cracking.

Add the looming military catastrophes of Pokrovsk and Kupiansk (and they won’t be the last), Ukraine’s enormous desertion problem, growing rebelliousness against the brutality of forced mobilization (“busification”), and the prospect of a dark, cold winter, and Zelensky’s chances of political survival have clearly decreased. He may still be the West’s proverbial “son of a bitch,” but there’s no doubt that the search for replacements must be shifting into high gear. And there even is the possibility that his former “friends” in Washington have started pro-actively undermining him: the anti-corruption prosecutors now on his heels are well known to enjoy American protection.

Zelensky can try to talk tough now, give interviews to Bloomberg about his valiant struggle against and zero tolerance for corruption even among his “friends,” and call for investigations, consequences, and punishments all around. His credibility remains zero.

Once upon a time, long, long ago, silly Western propagandists likened him to Che Guevara, the famous South American guerrilla leader. Now “Che Guevara” is just another gangster nickname in the Energoatom mafia, apparently for a former Ukrainian prime minister. Zelensky has done enormous damage to his country. The irony is that doing damage to himself is perhaps the last service he can render Ukraine. He is a national liability, just like his “friends” who are now behind grates or on the run. Only, he is even worse.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

Read the full article here

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