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29 Oct, 2024 13:31

Corruption weakening Ukrainian military – general

Kiev should not expect the West to continue arming its troops, a senior official has warned
Corruption weakening Ukrainian military – general

The Ukrainian armed forces cannot swiftly react to the changing battlefield situation because its logistics are undermined by bureaucracy and corruption, a top general has complained.

Adaptability is a major requirement for a modern military, and Kiev’s army is lacking in this regard – but not because of the troops, Major General Dmitry Marchenko, who is involved in the defense of the port city of Nikolayev, said in an interview on Monday.

“Unfortunately, our bureaucracy, our corruption do not allow us to adapt and to quickly produce what we need,” he said, referring to the deficiencies in Ukraine’s defense industry.

He lamented the lost opportunities to ramp up production between the coup in Kiev in 2014 and the outbreak of hostilities with Russia in early 2022.

“Some of our politicians and officials have skipped [that period] as if they were on recess,” he said. Arms procurement campaigns in the years prior to 2022 “failed,” but then-Defense Minister Andrey Taran was allowed to resign with praise for his work, Marchenko claimed.

The minister dismissed as “mere speculation” allegations that his department was unable to follow its own plans to buy hardware for the troops.

Ukraine has increasingly relied on foreign aid to arm its military throughout the conflict with Russia. The ‘victory plan’ presented earlier this month by Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky requires further increases in Western support.

The proposal says nothing about what Ukrainians should do, Marchenko said. It states that “everyone must give us weapons, more, and more” but in reality “we are owed nothing,” the general said.

Public sector graft has been a major problem for Ukraine since it gained independence in the 1990s, as reflected by the nation’s consistently high rankings in the perception of corruption.

Zelensky’s government claims that it has made great progress in tackling the problem. NBC News reported in June that the issue has strained Kiev’s relations with US Ambassador Bridget Brink, who, according to Ukrainian officials, is making unreasonable demands in this area.

A report in Time magazine earlier this year cites an anonymous aide to Zelensky as complaining that people in Ukraine “are stealing like there’s no tomorrow.”

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