"WASHINGTON — Since the start of the military
operation in Ukraine, U.S. officials have watched with some anxiety as billions
of American dollars flowed into the country, well aware of Kyiv’s history of
political corruption and fearing that aid might be siphoned off for personal
gain.
The ouster of several top officials from
Ukraine’s government on Tuesday following accusations of government
corruption has lent those concerns a fresh urgency. Although U.S. and European
officials say there is no evidence that aid to Ukraine was stolen, even the
perception of fraud would threaten political support for continued assistance
and for the reconstruction effort that Western officials envision.
The allegations included reports
that Ukraine’s military had agreed to pay inflated prices for food meant for
its troops. A deputy prosecutor general was fired for reportedly borrowing an
oligarch’s Mercedes to drive to Spain for a vacation, and a presidential aide
accused of commandeering a Chevrolet Tahoe donated to help with evacuations was
forced out.
Rather than betray alarm, however,
U.S. officials insist the drama shows that President Volodymyr Zelensky is
committed to fighting corruption.
The shake-up in Kyiv “sends a very
strong signal to others who would try to rip off this effort and is important
for the future of Ukraine,” Victoria Nuland, the under secretary of state for
political affairs, testified on Thursday during a Senate Foreign Relations
Committee hearing on Ukraine.
“We have been very clear that we
need to see the anti-corruption steps, including good corporate governance and
judicial measures, move forward,” she added.
Ms. Nuland was responding to a
question from Senator Jeff Merkley, Democrat of Oregon, who said he was worried
that corruption in Ukraine’s government could be “a kind of cancer eating away
at support that they need from everyone in the world.”
In an episode whose details remain
murky, Mr. Zelensky in July fired his top prosecutor,
intelligence chief and other senior officials for reasons he said were related
to treasonous ties with Russia. But to the relief of Western and Ukrainian
leaders, corruption has otherwise not been a significant factor.
Mr. Zelensky is a former comedian who campaigned as a
political outsider capable of stamping out the culture of corruption that has
gripped his country since its independence from the Soviet Union. In his
inaugural address in May 2019, he said that Ukrainian politicians had created
“a country of opportunities — the opportunities to bribe, steal and pluck the
resources.”
A 2021 “Corruption Perception Index” by
the watchdog group Transparency International that ranked 180 countries for
their perceived level of public-sector corruption, with No. 1 being the least
apparently corrupt, put Ukraine at No. 122. Concern about corruption was second
only to the Russian threat in the Biden administration’s policy toward Kyiv. In 2015, when he was vice
president, Mr. Biden pleaded with
Ukraine’s parliament to stamp out “the pervasive poison of cronyism,
corruption, and kleptocracy.”
While attention has focused on the
possible theft or diversion of American weapons, U.S. officials take comfort in
the fact that Ukraine has an urgent incentive to throw every available armament
against the Russians.
In addition, the United States
requires Ukrainian officials to log all military equipment they receive, track
its progress to the front lines, and report ammunition expenditure and any
damage or destruction of weapons, a senior defense official said last fall.
Defense Department officials have trained Ukrainian troops in methods to help
keep track of American arms, and U.S. personnel conduct inspections inside the
country where security conditions allow.
Celeste Wallander, the assistant
secretary of defense for international security affairs, said at Thursday’s
hearing that the administration “has not seen credible evidence of any
diversion of U.S.-provided weapons outside of Ukraine.” She added that the
Pentagon was using oversight “mechanisms that go above and beyond our standard
practices.”
But U.S. officials fear that
humanitarian aid, and especially direct financial aid, is more at risk of
embezzlement or theft.
The largest type of cash infusion
into Ukraine’s government from the United States — $13 billion of it so far —
is called direct budgetary support. It is approved by Congress, administered by
the United States Agency for International Development, and distributed by the
World Bank. Ukrainian officials ultimately decide how to allocate the money.
The U.S. agency says the budgetary
aid funds basic government services like hospitals and schools, along with
emergency responders and firefighters, and supports programs for needy,
disabled and internally displaced people. It also helps provide housing and
subsidies for utilities.
Erin McKee, an assistant USAID
administrator, told the Senate panel that the agency used “extraordinary
measures” to track that funding.
The agency has a contract with the
accounting firm Deloitte to have a team work in Kyiv with the Ukrainian
government to monitor and audit the aid money. Ms. McKee said the team was in
Ukraine this week.
Last fall, Deloitte completed an audit
of money flows from the World Bank to the state treasury account for the
Ukrainian government budget and found no “significant areas of concern,” USAID
said. Deloitte has since begun an audit of money flows from the treasury
account to recipients, the agency said.
The agency also said it has
continued to give aid to anti-corruption and rule-of-law programs in Ukraine,
as it has done for years. That includes support for independent media
organizations and civil society groups.
Ukrainian officials have said they
are aware of the need for transparency on expenditures, declarations that
American lawmakers say appear to be sincere.
For now, the Ukrainian leader
appears to enjoy the confidence of key U.S. officials and lawmakers from both
parties. On Thursday, the Senate committee’s Democratic chairman, Bob Menendez,
commended Mr. Zelensky and his cabinet “for their serious oversight plans for
U.S. and international assistance,” and said that anti-corruption measures had
been effective.
“It demonstrates what President
Zelensky has told us: that there will be zero tolerance for fraud or waste,”
Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut, said at a news conference
in Washington on Tuesday, shortly after returning from a visit to Kyiv.
“All of the scrutiny and oversight
so far has disclosed no fraud or waste, no misappropriation of any of the
military or humanitarian assistance that have been provided so far,” Mr.
Blumenthal added.
Even before this week’s dismissals from Ukraine’s
government, however, some prominent Republicans had expressed concern about the
possible misuse of U.S. aid.
America must ensure that resources
“don’t go to underwrite a corrupt Ukrainian government,” former Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo said in a November appearance on Fox News. However, he has
also said the United States should give Ukraine the weapons it needs.
With other Republicans growing
skeptical of Ukraine aid, their congressional leaders say they will place even
more emphasis on oversight and accountability.
Some congressional Republicans
pushed unsuccessfully last year for the creation of a special inspector general
modeled on the one whose office issued scathing indictments of wasted U.S.
reconstruction aid in Afghanistan. Currently, inspectors general at the State
Department, Department of Defense, and USAID are jointly conducting oversight
as part of an informal working group.
Sarah Chayes, a corruption expert
who has studied the embezzlement of aid, said it was important that aid
packages budget money for evaluation and monitoring. She also recommended
having intelligence agencies compile information on the personal networks of
Ukrainian officials.
And the United States should work
with civil society groups experienced in anti-corruption efforts, to bolster
the role of “citizen watchdogs.”
“It’s somewhat risky to rely on a government exclusively to
police its own corruption,” she said.
William Taylor, a former U.S.
ambassador to Kyiv, said that policing corruption is very difficult. But he
credited Mr. Zelensky for promoting effective reforms.
Mr. Taylor said that Mr. Zelensky
had strong incentives to keep corruption in check. At stake are not only his
own public standing in Ukraine and Western aid to fight Russia, but also
Ukraine’s hopes of joining the European Union. E.U. membership, which is a high
priority for Mr. Zelensky’s government, will require the country to meet the
union’s high anti-corruption standards.
Ukraine will remain desperate for
money to rebuild its shattered country. Group of 7 officials have begun to
sketch the outlines of a reconstruction effort that might cost hundreds of
billions of dollars.
Some Western officials say they
worry most about the potential for misuse of such enormous sums.
“Anti-corruption is going to be a condition
for successful reconstruction,” Mr. Taylor said.
Mr. Taylor was optimistic, saying
the latest scandal showed that Ukraine is more capable than ever of policing
itself. He noted that some of the accusations of misconduct came from
journalists, in an example of press freedom, and from special oversight bodies
that had been created by Mr. Zelensky’s predecessor and that the Ukrainian
leader had empowered.
“The institutions worked,” Mr.
Taylor said.”
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