Ukraine’s Oligarchs
Turn on Each Other
Ukraine’s post-coup regime is facing what
looks like a falling-out among thieves as
oligarch-warlord Igor Kolomoisky, who was
given his own province to rule, brought his
armed men to Kiev to fight for control of
the state-owned energy company, further
complicating the State Department’s
propaganda efforts, reports Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
March 25, 2015 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - In the
never-never land of how the mainstream U.S.
press covers the Ukraine crisis, the
appointment last year of thuggish oligarch
Igor Kolomoisky to govern one of the
country’s eastern provinces was pitched as a
democratic “reform” because he was
supposedly too rich to bribe, without noting
that his wealth had come from plundering the
country’s economy.
In other words, the new U.S.-backed
“democratic” regime, after overthrowing
democratically elected President Viktor
Yanukovych because he was “corrupt,” was
rewarding one of Ukraine’s top thieves by
letting him lord over his own province,
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, with the help of his
personal army.
Ukrainian oligarch
Igor Kolomoisky confronting journalists
after he led an armed team in a raid at
the government-owned energy company in
Kiev on March 19, 2015. (Screen shot
from YouTube)
Last year, Kolomoisky’s
brutal militias, which include neo-Nazi
brigades, were praised for their fierce
fighting against ethnic Russians from the
east who were resisting the removal of their
president. But now Kolomoisky, whose
financial empire is crumbling as Ukraine’s
economy founders, has turned his hired guns
against the Ukrainian government
led by another oligarch, President Petro
Poroshenko.
Last Thursday night,
Kolomoisky and his armed men went to Kiev
after the government tried to wrest control
of the state-owned energy company
UkrTransNafta from one of his associates.
Kolomoisky and his men raided the company
offices to seize and apparently destroy
records. As he left the building, he
cursed out journalists who had
arrived to ask what was going on. He ranted
about “Russian saboteurs.”
It was a revealing display
of how the corrupt Ukrainian
political-economic system works and the
nature of the “reformers” whom the U.S.
State Department has pushed into positions
of power. According to
BusinessInsider, the Kiev
government tried to smooth Kolomoisky’s
ruffled feathers by announcing “that the new
company chairman [at UkrTransNafta] would
not be carrying out any investigations of
its finances.”
Yet, it remained unclear
whether Kolomoisky would be satisfied with
what amounts to an offer to let any past
thievery go unpunished. But if this promised
amnesty wasn’t enough, Kolomoisky appeared
ready to use his private army to discourage
any accountability.
On Monday, Valentyn
Nalyvaychenko, chief of the State Security
Service, accused Dnipropetrovsk officials of
financing armed gangs and threatening
investigators, Bloomberg News
reported, while noting that
Ukraine has sunk to 142nd place out of 175
countries in Transparency International’s
Corruptions Perception Index, the worst in
Europe.
The see-no-evil approach
to how the current Ukrainian authorities do
business relates as well to Ukraine’s new
Finance Minister Natalie Jaresko, who
appears to have enriched herself at the
expense of a $150 million
U.S.-taxpayer-financed investment fund for
Ukraine.
Jaresko, a former U.S.
diplomat who received overnight Ukrainian
citizenship in December to become Finance
Minister, had been in charge of the Western
NIS Enterprise Fund (WNISEF), which became
the center of insider-dealing and conflicts
of interest, although the U.S. Agency for
International Development showed little
desire to examine the ethical problems –
even after Jaresko’s ex-husband tried to
blow the whistle. [See Consortiumnews.com’s
“Ukraine
Finance Minister’s American ‘Values.’”]
Passing Out the
Billions
Jaresko will be in charge
of dispensing the $17.5 billion that the
International Monetary Fund is allocating to
Ukraine, along with billions of dollars more
expected from U.S. and European governments.
Regarding Kolomoisky’s
claim about “Russian saboteurs,” the
government said that was not the case,
explaining that the clash resulted from the
parliament’s vote last week to reduce
Kolomoisky’s authority to run the company
from his position as a minority owner. As
part of the shakeup, Kolomoisky’s protégé
Oleksandr Lazorko was fired as chairman, but
he refused to leave and barricaded himself
in his office, setting the stage for
Kolomoisky’s arrival with armed men.
On Tuesday, the New York
Times
reported on the dispute but also
flashed back to its earlier propagandistic
praise of the 52-year-old oligarch,
recalling that “Mr. Kolomoisky was one of
several oligarchs, considered too rich to
bribe, who were appointed to leadership
positions in a bid to stabilize Ukraine.”
Kolomoisky also is
believed to have purchased influence inside
the U.S. government through his
behind-the-scenes manipulation of Ukraine’s
largest private gas firm, Burisma Holdings.
Last year, the shadowy Cyprus-based company
appointed Vice President Joe
Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, to its board of
directors. Burisma also lined up
well-connected lobbyists, some with ties to
Secretary of State John Kerry, including
Kerry’s former Senate chief of staff David
Leiter, according to lobbying disclosures.
As Time magazine
reported, “Leiter’s involvement
in the firm rounds out a power-packed team
of politically-connected Americans that also
includes a second new board member, Devon
Archer, a Democratic bundler and former
adviser to John Kerry’s 2004 presidential
campaign. Both Archer and Hunter Biden have
worked as business partners with Kerry’s
son-in-law, Christopher Heinz, the founding
partner of Rosemont Capital, a
private-equity company.”
According
to
investigative journalism in
Ukraine, the ownership of Burisma has been
traced to Privat Bank, which is
controlled by Kolomoisky.
So, it appears that
Ukraine’s oligarchs who continue to wield
enormous power inside the corrupt country
are now circling each other over what’s left
of the economic spoils and positioning
themselves for a share of the international
bailouts to come.
As for “democratic
reform,” only in the upside-down world of
the State Department’s Orwellian
“information war” against Russia over
Ukraine would imposing a corrupt and brutal
oligarch like Kolomoisky as the unelected
governor of a defenseless population be
considered a positive.
(Early Wednesday morning,
President Poroshenko dismissed Kolomoisky
from his post as Dnipropetrovsk regional
governor.)
Investigative reporter Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories
for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the
1980s. You can buy his latest book,
America’s Stolen
Narrative, either in print
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