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Ready Cash and Toxic Image Explain Ukraine Role in U.S. Scandals

Ukraine’s pluralistic nature of corruption is run by multiple political-industrial groups and uncontrolled by the government.

Ready Cash and Toxic Image Explain Ukraine Role in U.S. Scandals
A highway leads to Kiev central station, operated by Ukrzaliznytsia, Ukraine’s state railway, in Kiev, Ukraine. (Photographer: Vincent Mundy/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Why Ukraine?

For the second time in as many years, a major political scandal related to U.S. presidential-election campaigns has traced its way back to this Eastern European nation of 42 million, riven by tensions between Russia and the West and weakened by systemic corruption.

The first was a fraud case against President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign manager Paul Manafort. Now, there are allegations of influence peddling by former Vice President Joe Biden. Why they should originate in Ukraine has a simpler explanation than geopolitics: money, and the high demand for American image-smoothing services.

“Ukrainian oligarchs and corrupt officials spend enormous amount of money for whitewashing in Western countries,” distributing large fees to Westerners who choose not to scrutinize the source of the funds, said Daria Kalenyuk, executive director of Ukraine’s Anti-Corruption Action Center, a Kyiv-based nonprofit that helps shape anti-corruption policies.

“In the end, there are big flows of easy money,” Kalenyuk said.

Ukraine’s ongoing conflict with Russia and the critical role the country plays in U.S. and European relations with Moscow have given Ukraine an elevated geopolitical importance, but in the context of the latest scandals that’s irrelevant, said James Sherr, a veteran analyst of Ukraine who is now a senior fellow at the Estonian Foreign Policy Institute, a Tallinn-based think-tank.

But if anything sets the country apart, according to Sherr, it is the pluralistic nature of corruption in a country that’s run by multiple political-industrial groups uncontrolled by the central government. That gives the groups’ leaders, the so-called oligarchs, both more cause and more freedom to hire Western advisers and front men.

Hardly Unique

Hunter Biden was hired in 2014 to sit on the board of Burisma Group, one of Ukraine’s biggest natural-gas companies, for as much as $50,000 a month. He’s hardly unique: Former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder chairs the boards of a controversial Russia-to-Germany natural-gas pipeline project, Nordstream 2, and of Russia’s state-controlled oil behemoth, Rosneft Oil Co PJSC.

Ready Cash and Toxic Image Explain Ukraine Role in U.S. Scandals

When the U.K. froze some of Burisma’s assets after the 2014 Maidan revolution, the company’s founder -- Yanukovych-era Energy Minister Mykola Zlochevsky -- invited both the younger Biden and Poland’s former President Aleksander Kwasniewski to join the board to polish its badly tarnished image.

Trump and his attorney, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, have alleged that Joe Biden pressured Ukraine’s then government to fire the country’s chief prosecutor in 2016 to prevent an investigation of Burisma and Zlochevsky, as a favor to his son. Biden did push hard for the prosecutor’s removal, in line with U.S. policy, but by then the Burisma probe was no longer being pursued. Ukrainian officials told Bloomberg News in May 2019 that they had uncovered no evidence of wrongdoing by Hunter Biden.

Ready Cash and Toxic Image Explain Ukraine Role in U.S. Scandals

Trump himself is now under scrutiny for allegedly pressuring Ukraine’s recently elected president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, to investigate the actions of the former vice president, a leading Democratic contender for next year’s election. U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Tuesday afternoon she’s opening a formal impeachment inquiry, saying the president has violated his oath of office and obligations under the Constitution.

The case against Manafort, meanwhile, emerged from Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign. Yet the crimes for which Manafort was, in March, convicted and sentenced to a 47-month jail term were unrelated.

Manafort and Biden are just two of many Americans who have sought well-paid work in Ukraine. On Monday, Bloomberg News reported that another wealthy Ukrainian, Dmitry Firtash, recently hired a pair of American lawyers: Victoria Toensing and Joseph DiGenova. The married couple have been vocal critics of Mueller’s Russia probe. Firtash, a former Manafort business partner, is fighting extradition to the U.S. on corruption charges.

Ready Cash and Toxic Image Explain Ukraine Role in U.S. Scandals

U.S. political consultants took lucrative international work in the series of elections that followed the country’s independence from the former Soviet Union in 1991. Ukraine’s oligarchs spent millions of dollars on campaigns as they tried to get their preferred political parties and candidates into office, primarily to safeguard their existing assets and gain more from the state. Viktor Yanukovych was just one such candidate.

Political Gun-for-Hire

But no American political consultant worked as long or made as much money in Ukraine as Manafort. U.S. prosecutors said the political gun-for-hire made more than $60 million in Ukraine between 2010 and 2014, mostly by advising Yanukovych and his Russia-leaning Party of Regions on contracts largely funded by oligarchs. In 2010, he helped Yanukovych win the presidency, after a radical makeover designed to improve his semi-criminal image in the West.

Later, Manafort hired U.S. law firm Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP to write a report defending the jailing of Yanukovych’s arch political rival, Yulia Tymoshenko. He channeled a $4 million payment, financed by a Ukrainian oligarch, to the firm through his offshore accounts to avoid public exposure, according to court filings. The Skadden report was written by a team of lawyers spearheaded by the former Obama administration White House counsel, Greg Craig.

Giuliani himself has been on the payrolls of various Ukrainian oligarchs, off and on, for more than a decade. In 2008, he also advised Vitali Klitschko, a pro-Western politician and former world heavyweight boxing champion, on his campaign to be elected mayor of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. In 2017, he advised the mayor of Kharkiv on a contract paid for by local oligarch Pavel Fuks.

The cost to Ukraine of its unwanted involvement in domestic U.S. politics has been immense, said Sherr, the analyst, as it tries to please both President Trump and his Congressional opponents in Ukraine’s most important strategic partner and protector. “Ukraine today,” he said, “is more unsettled about relations with its partners than at any time since 2014.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Marc Champion in London at mchampion7@bloomberg.net;Stephanie Baker in London at stebaker@bloomberg.net;Daryna Krasnolutska in Kiev at dkrasnolutsk@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rosalind Mathieson at rmathieson3@bloomberg.net, Melinda Grenier, Robert Jameson

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.