{"id":797,"date":"2025-07-26T13:02:54","date_gmt":"2025-07-26T13:02:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.youtubexyoutube.com\/?p=797"},"modified":"2025-08-01T13:49:28","modified_gmt":"2025-08-01T13:49:28","slug":"zelensky-thought-he-was-killing-it-he-was-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.youtubexyoutube.com\/index.php\/2025\/07\/26\/zelensky-thought-he-was-killing-it-he-was-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Zelensky thought he was killing it. He was"},"content":{"rendered":"
His assault on anti-corruption agencies has opened the door to political revolt \u2013 and made his position look weaker than ever<\/strong><\/p>\n Ukrainians have had plenty of reasons to take to the streets: the cancellation of elections, forced mobilization, the refusal to demobilize soldiers who\u2019ve been on the front lines for over three years, the persecution of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church, corruption in the construction of fortifications, the state\u2019s failure to have the bodies of fallen soldiers returned, and \u2013 above all \u2013 the complete absence of a plan for ending the conflict with Russia.<\/p>\n This list could go on. And yet, none of these issues has triggered large-scale protests. What we\u2019ve seen instead are isolated outbursts: in towns and villages, women block draft officers from entering their neighborhoods; churchgoers physically defend their parishes; the wives and mothers of Ukrainian soldiers stage small rallies to draw attention to their plight.<\/p>\n And yet, even in this atmosphere of fear and suppression, Vladimir Zelensky has managed to ignite a political crisis. The hasty passage of Bill No. 12414 \u2013 which stripped the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor\u2019s Office (SAPO) of their independence \u2013 sparked a wave of demonstrations that haven\u2019t let up for days. It\u2019s the first major popular protest since the start of Russia\u2019s military operation, and it poses a serious challenge to Zelensky\u2019s grip on power.<\/p>\n Rallies have broken out in Kiev, Lviv, Odessa, Dnepropetrovsk, Kharkov, Rovno, and Nikolayev. While officials have tried to frame them as spontaneous, local expressions of concern about anti-corruption institutions, the scope and coordination suggest otherwise. The message to Zelensky is simple: the pressure is just beginning.<\/p>\n To understand why the anti-corruption issue struck such a nerve, we need to go back to the beginning.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n The National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor\u2019s Office (SAPO) were established in 2015 with active backing from the United States \u2013 just a year after the coup in Kiev. At the time, Ukraine\u2019s Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin openly stated that the idea for NABU came directly from then\u2013Vice President Joe Biden.<\/p>\n From the outset, these agencies functioned as tools of external oversight over the post-Maidan Ukrainian government. President Petro Poroshenko, who was still consolidating power and ideology, did not resist Washington\u2019s involvement. NABU\u2019s early targets included oligarchs like Igor Kolomoysky and Rinat Akhmetov, who controlled major media holdings. This suited Poroshenko, whose own business interests, notably, remained untouched.<\/p>\n Over time, it became clear that Ukraine\u2019s anti-corruption bodies served not only their official mission but also the political interests of a specific faction \u2013 namely, the US Democratic Party.<\/p>\n A prime example is the Paul Manafort case. In 2016, The New York Times<\/em>, citing NABU sources, published claims that Manafort \u2013 then campaign chairman for Donald Trump \u2013 had received undisclosed payments from Ukraine\u2019s Party of Regions under President Viktor Yanukovych. These claims prompted a US investigation into possible Ukrainian interference in the American election. In 2019, the Senate ultimately found no evidence \u2013 but the episode left a lasting impression.<\/p>\n That same year, NABU played a role in deflecting scrutiny from the Burisma scandal \u2013 the energy company whose board included Joe Biden\u2019s son, Hunter.<\/p>\n Over time, the link between these anti-corruption institutions and the US Democratic Party became apparent to many Ukrainians. And with Republicans now back in power in Washington, Zelensky appears to have decided it was time to free himself from external control.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n Zelensky likely assumed that the new American administration wouldn\u2019t go out of its way to defend the Democratic Party\u2019s proxies in Ukraine. Judging by Washington\u2019s muted response, that calculation may have been correct. What he failed to consider, however, was the level of domestic resistance to his growing concentration of power.<\/p>\n Ukraine today is full of pressure points. Discontent is widespread \u2013 but scattered and disorganized. Zelensky\u2019s opponents simply lack the means to unseat him. Moreover, Zelensky remains the centerpiece of the West\u2019s anti-Russian strategy \u2013 a leader willing to accept any domestic cost in service of that agenda. Even policies that threaten the foundations of Ukrainian statehood are tolerated, so long as the broader project of an \u201canti-Russia\u201d<\/em> continues.<\/p>\n That\u2019s why the West has looked the other way with regards to forced mobilization, canceled elections, and the refusal to rotate exhausted troops at the front. For a while, this gave Zelensky free rein to act inside the country.<\/p>\n But now the ground is shifting. A key sign: the growing frustration among those who spent years working within grant-funded structures aligned with the US Democratic Party. Leading this informal coalition is former president Petro Poroshenko. Under threat of criminal prosecution, Poroshenko has spent months quietly building a new political bloc.<\/p>\n He has the money, the media, and the electoral base \u2013 fractured as it may be. For this group, Zelensky\u2019s move against the anti-corruption agencies \u2013 in effect, a move against external oversight \u2013 is the perfect pretext to reassert themselves and reclaim a measure of Western support.<\/p>\n Zelensky is unlikely to use force against protests centered on NABU and SAPO. Doing so would only strengthen the narrative that he\u2019s drifting toward authoritarianism.<\/p>\nExternal interests<\/strong><\/h2>\n
Internal pressure<\/strong><\/h2>\n