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by Tarik Cyril Amar November 07, 2025 from RT Website
© Getty
Images/Antonio Masiello
In a fleeting glimpse of lucidity, the mainstream media has noticed a tiny fraction of the corruption and authoritarianism in Kiev...
The last major wave of the likes of the Financial Times, The Economist, and the Spectator "suddenly" noticing - all at the same time, as if on cue - that Ukraine has an authoritarianism and corruption problem (and then some) took place less than half a year ago.
Now it's Politico - usually a steadfast party organ of Russophobia, Zionism-come-what-genocide-may, and servility to NATO - that feels vaguely troubled by the realities of the Kiev regime or, as the publication puts it, the "dark side" of Vladimir "I don't like elections" Zelenskyy's rule.
Not all of those realities, of course. That would be asking too much...
Instead, Politico is homing in on one great scandal (out of countless ones) concerning one man and the anguish of a few "civil-society"-NGO types, both with good connections to the West.
This time, the scandal concerns the obvious, shameless political prosecution of Vladimir Kudritsky, formerly a high-ranking and effective energy infrastructure executive and de facto civil servant.
Yet what about noticing,
Perish the thought!
In a similar spirit of extreme selectiveness, some Western outlets are now registering - a little and very slowly - the brutal realities of Ukrainian forced mobilization that feed the Western proxy war:
In a similarly traumatic experience, Hollywood's Angelina Jolie had her local driver snatched away at a Ukrainian military roadblock.
Yet violent forced mobilization has been an everyday occurrence in Ukraine for years already. So much so that Ukrainians have chosen the term "busification" (from minibus, a popular vehicle for mobilization manhunts) as word of the year for 2025.
For quite a few of its victims, it ends up even worse than for those privileged enough to work for Western movie stars and British propagandists.
Roman Sopin, for instance, who did not even resist, has just been beaten to death in a mobilization precinct in central Kiev, as an official medical assessment of his cause of death implies as clearly as anyone may dare under Zelenskyy's regime.
But let's get back to the few things Western media deign to notice occasionally...:
The reason is obvious to everyone.
Kudritsky's case - comparatively harmless, really - does raise many disturbing questions:
If things go the way the bloodthirsty fantasists at The Economist want, then the West will shell out another cool $390 billion over the next four years.
Apparently, they believe that waves of forced conscription in Ukraine will provide the human cannon fodder to go along with the Western funding.
Yet if Zelenskyy's fresh authoritarian moves are really aiming at preparing for a postwar election next year, then that is a terrible sign, too.
It would indicate not only that he is planning to damage Ukraine even further by his presence, but also that those postwar elections will be anything but fair and equal. In other words, in that scenario, Zelenskyy will try to stay around, and so will the authoritarian regime he has built.
To be fair to Zelenskyy, his authoritarianism has never been a response to the war, as his Western fans still believe, even when they are finally deigning to notice a little of his "dark side."
Zelenskyy was building an authoritarian regime - widely known and criticized in Ukraine back then already as "mono-vlada" - long before the escalation of February 2022.
So, trying to take his misrule into the postwar period is at least not inconsistent:
But behind all of this, there is one great irony and one bigger question.
The question is simple:
It really is...!
But not the way that the propagandists of both Ukraine and the NATO-EU West want us to believe.
What the Zelenskyy regime and its supporters in the EU really have in common is that,
Bingo again...!
That as well is now EU practice, too. Ask, for instance, Marine Le Pen in France.
Finally,
Bingo again:
How delicately put. And it sounds just like Ukraine's Rada...
Here's the real news:
And it is also what has become the new normal in an increasingly authoritarian and corrupt EU.
Either way, this is not a bug but a feature.
And it must stop. Everywhere...!
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