{"id":8357,"date":"2025-11-12T20:05:08","date_gmt":"2025-11-12T21:05:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/?p=8357"},"modified":"2025-11-17T18:41:49","modified_gmt":"2025-11-17T18:41:49","slug":"will-zelensky-survive-ukraines-western-media-backers-react-to-the-latest-corruption-scandal","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/index.php\/2025\/11\/12\/will-zelensky-survive-ukraines-western-media-backers-react-to-the-latest-corruption-scandal\/","title":{"rendered":"Will Zelensky survive? Ukraine\u2019s Western media backers react to the latest corruption scandal"},"content":{"rendered":"
Major media players wonder whether a $100 million graft scheme in the country\u2019s vital energy sector might be too much for the former comedian to overcome<\/strong><\/p>\n The corruption scandal currently enveloping Ukraine is being described in stark – and even dire – terms by Kiev’s most ardent Western media backers. Although hardly the first instance of corruption coming to light under Zelensky’s rule, many commentators see this week’s events as the gravest threat the Ukrainian leader has faced thus far. Here’s a sampling of what’s being said.<\/p>\n Owen Matthews penned a widely read piece for The Spectator titled ‘The scandal that could bring down Volodymyr Zelensky’ in which he described the investigation as possibly having “momentous consequences for Zelensky’s political future.”<\/em> “A full-scale war seems to be about to break between independent anti-corruption agencies and Zelensky’s inner circle, and the consequences are likely to be ugly,”<\/em> Matthews warns, while describing in vivid terms the power struggle between Ukraine’s National Security Service (SBU), which is loyal to Zelensky and “wields considerable domestic power through its control of the judicial system and prisons”<\/em> and the country’s Western-backed anti-corruption agencies.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n Russian sovereign wealth fund head Kirill Dmitriev said on X that The Spectator is “now also telling the truth about anti-corruption probes into Zelensky’s allies — and what it could mean for him. The simultaneous shift in tone across outlets is not a coincidence. It’s profound and significant.”<\/em> <\/p>\n The New York Times juxtaposed Zelensky’s attempted crackdown on the anti-graft efforts earlier this year with probes into his inner circle, saying that “when Mr. Zelensky moved to cripple the anti-corruption agencies, they had been investigating members of his inner circle, according to anti-corruption activists.”<\/em> <\/p>\n Politico came out with an article calling the alleged graft of $100 million from the energy sector “the most damaging”<\/em> of the scandals Zelensky has presided over while in office.<\/p>\n Volodymyt Fesenko, a Kiev-based analyst with the political research center Penta, said “of course, this case is a huge political risk and a time bomb for the president.”<\/em> He also called it “the major domestic political event not only in the fall of 2025, but probably throughout the current year.”<\/em> <\/p>\n Fesenko’s piece served as the inspiration for the title of an opinion piece penned in The Times by long-time Russia commentator Marc Bennetts called ‘Corruption scandal is a ‘time bomb’ for Zelensky and the war effort.’<\/p>\n Samuel Ramani published a piece in The Telegraph called ‘This corruption scandal could bring down Zelensky’ in which he said “predictions of Zelensky’s demise are swirling intensely,”<\/em> although he admitted that Zelensky possessed remarkable survival instincts.<\/p>\n
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