the insignia of the Counter Intelligence dept. of the Ukrainian SBU
A deep and continuing rot of treason imperils Ukraine's battle against the Russians. Investigating alleged Russian war crimes took precedence over arresting Ukrainian traitors.
One
of the parties Zelenskyy moved on was led by Putin’s close ally, Viktor Medvedchuk,
who was supposed to take reign of the Ukrainian government had Putin’s plot of
assassinating President Zelenskyy succeeded. He was arrested right after
the invasion and is under investigation for treason.
Medvedchuk’s
ascension would have required Kyiv’s quick capitulation. But that calculation,
based on sources Putin had cultivated for decades inside Ukraine’s security
services, who were expected to provide the invaders with logistical support and
secrets about Kyiv’s defenses, turned out to be off the mark. As Ukraine
enters the fifth month of the war, Zelenskyy is still grappling with the
challenge of finding and rooting out domestic traitors.
That
became clear on July 17, when Zelenskyy announced the
dismissal of Ivan Bakanov, the
head of Ukraine’s powerful domestic security service, the SBU, as well as Irina
Venediktova, his Prosecutor General. Bakanov’s dismissal was not much of a
surprise, following as it did the arrest of the former head of the SBU’s Crimea
branch, Oleg Kulinich, only days before. But Venediktova’s dismissal at the
same time was particularly unexpected.
“Both decisions came quite unexpectedly,” said Olena Halushka, a
board member of Ukraine’s Anti-corruption Action Centre,
or AntAC. “There were rumors of the possible firing of Bakanov due to serious
questions about the SBU work, particularly during the first weeks of the war.
But Venediktova's dismissal was not preceded by any recent major
scandals.”
The reasons behind her sacking remain
murky, compounded by Zelenskyy’s subsequent statement that she would remain in
the government in a potential diplomatic role. He also emphasized that Bakanov, a childhood friend and longtime associate, was
not suspected of committing any crimes.
But
the high level shuffle provoked swift criticism.
“These
dismissals were done in a political manner, which again reminds us that the
process of hiring and firing the heads of such important agencies should be depoliticized,”
said Halushka, who is also co-founder of the International Center of
Ukrainian Victory, established after the invasion to rally
international support for Kyiv’s battle against the Russians. ”So far, only
acting heads of both institutions have been appointed, so it is important to
follow them with permanent ones.”
Zelenskyy
said that his decisions were based on the sheer volume of treason cases and
cooperation with Russia that had been uncovered. He said that “651 criminal proceedings have
been registered in Ukraine on charges of treason and collaboration activities
of employees of the prosecutor's office, pre-trial investigation, and other law
enforcement agencies. In the framework of 198 criminal proceedings, suspicions
were [raised with] the relevant persons.” Zelenskyy added that over
60 employees of the prosecutor's office and the SBU had remained in territories
occupied by Russia and were working "against our state."
A Trail of Perfidy
The SBU has long been mired in scandal
and drawn scrutiny from activists calling for reform. Right after the
start of Russia’s invasion, reports began surfacing of some SBU agents
assisting its troops in capturing towns.
Halushka doesn’t believe that Zelenskyy’s
recent SBU firings will lead to major change.
“The president announced a number of
dismissals among the senior level leadership in the SBU, but this will hardly
lead to any substantial changes or solving the underlying issues of the
agency's work,” Halushka told me. “It needs comprehensive reform, which we have
been advocating for the last five years and which has not happened yet.
As for the role the SBU played during
invasion, a source privately told me that the “successes by Russia in the
early days, to capture Mariupol and Kherson, happened because of Ukrainian
officials in key positions assisting them, including SBU agents.”
The
July 16th arrest of the former head of
the SBU in Crimea, Oleg Kulinich, accused of cooperating with
Russian special services in Kherson, sparked new focus on the agency. According
to investigators, Kulinich
handed Russian intelligence an unspecified state secret.
“Kulinich was a member of
a certain criminal organization that was engaged in espionage and subversive
activities against Ukraine,” they said in a statement. “The actions of the
group harmed the sovereignty, territorial integrity and inviolability, the
defense capability [and] the economic and information security of our state,”
the SBU added.
Kulinich was head of the SBU Crimea
office from October 2020 to March 2022. After Russia’s annexation of Crimea in
2014, the office was relocated to Kherson. Kulinich, who studied at the Academy
of the FSB of Russia and did military service in the Federal
Counterintelligence Service of the Russian Federation, is suspected of being
involved in the Russian military’s rapid capture of the Kherson region, which
was launched from Crimea.
One
of Kulinich's aides, Ihor Sadokhin,
assistant and head of the local office’s Anti-Terrorist Center, was detained in
March on charges of treason. There is evidence that Sadokhin gave the
Russian forces a map of minefields and helped coordinate a flight path for
Russia’s aircraft, while he fled in a convoy of SBU agents going west. A month
later, his boss, Kherson’s top intelligence officer, General Serhiy
Krivoruchko, was stripped of his rank, Aljazeera reported. It was alleged Krivoruchko had
ordered his officers to evacuate Kherson against Zelenskyy’s orders, before
Russian troops stormed it.
Zelenskyy’s
focus on SBU began in March, shortly after Russia’s full-scale invasion, when
the president announced the firing of two of Ukraine’s top security officials
for being “traitors.”
“Regarding antiheroes,” he said in a
speech. “Now, I do not have time to deal with all the traitors. But gradually
they will all be punished.
(Watchman comment: a leader arrests traitors immediately.) That is why the
ex-chief of the Main Department of Internal Security of the Security Service of
Ukraine, Andriy Olehovych Naumov, and the former head of the Office of the
Security Service of Ukraine in the Kherson region, Serhiy Oleksandrovych
Kryvoruchko, are no longer generals.”
In
mid-June, news surfaced of Andriy Naumov’s arrest in
Serbia, after fleeing Ukraine on the eve of Russia’s full-scale
invasion. Sources told the Ukrainian media outlet Obozrevatel that Naumov,
along with a German citizen, were detained on June 7 on the border between
Serbia and Northern Macedonia for attempting to smuggle a large amount of undeclared currency and gems
across the border.
Venediktova’s
replacement, Oleksiy Symonenko,
may be in for some hard times. A parliamentary deputy from the European
Solidarity party, Volodymyr Ariev, essentially accused him of political
corruption. Others have publicly complained that Zelenskyy’s removal of
the two top officials is not enough. One parliamentarian demanded he “deal with
all the rats in power…”
Vitaly
Shabunin, head of the Anti-Corruption Action Center,
was also critical of the reshuffle and wrote that “the President explains the
dismissal of Venediktova and Bakanov by a large number of traitors in the SBU
and UCP (Office of the Prosecutor General).” But he said Zelenskyy should also have fired Oleh Tatarov, head
of the national crime-fighting State Bureau of Investigation,
who has been holding up key appointments to several anti-corruption agencies.
“Wild Narratives”
Meanwhile,
in the United States, a Ukrainian born Republican member of Congress, Rep.
Victoria Spartz of Indiana, raised eyebrows recently
when she publicly demanded Zelenskyy fire his chief of staff, Andriy Yermak,
accusing him of being a Russian agent.
In
a letter addressed to President Joe Biden and posted on social media, Spartz
demanded Biden provide Congress with information on Yermak to "confirm or
deny various serious allegations" surrounding him. Rep. Marcy Kaptur
(D-Ohio), leader of the Congressional Ukrainian Caucus, dismissed Spartz’s
accusations as "wild narratives" and said she was “playing into
Putin’s hands.”
Spartz
received the same reaction in Ukraine, where many voiced concerns that the
congresswoman was spreading Kremlin propaganda. An advisor to Zelenskyy, Igor
Novikov, called Spartz’s claims a mix of "hearsay and urban legends and
myths." In response, Spartz doubled down, calling on Yermak to quit and
accusing him of launching a “smear campaign” against her.
Now, with the Russian
invasion is entering its sixth month, rooting out subversives is critical to
Ukraine’s chances for survival. Yet the success of the endeavor largely falls
on the shoulders of an agency that itself has been shown to be infected by spies.
It’s imperative, says the GolosZmin party deputy leader Inna Sovsun, that
Zelenskyy put the SBU in safe hands.
“I
hope the President understands very well the importance of all these issues
now,” she told me, “and that there won't be any aspects other than the
highest professionalism and competence when choosing the best candidates” as
replacements for the traitors.
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