Why Do Ukrainians Fight? A $100 Million Graft Case Shows Why
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy was right not to interfere in an investigation into a $100 million embezzlement scandal.
Photographer: Sean Gallup/Getty Images EuropeThere are at least two legitimate responses to allegations that a group of highly placed Ukrainian officials have skimmed $100 million from contracts to repair and protect their nation’s critical energy infrastructure, even as Russian attacks plunge the nation into darkness and cold. One is to despair, the other to celebrate. The second, strange as it may sound, is more logical.
This episode goes to the heart of why Ukrainians are fighting at all. The war began in 2014, after then President Viktor Yanukovych was toppled by mass protests against the epic scale of his corruption and the captivity to Moscow this created. Graft was the glue with which the Kremlin had held its neighbor in check since the 1991 Soviet collapse, infiltrated its security services, manipulated its leaders and gutted its military.
