I've got news for you. The Russians and the Ukrainians are two sides of the same coin. One is a corrupt as the other.
That’s just a stupid position to take. It’s an entirely unsupportable argument that one would only try and make in a failed effort to justify our decision to switch sides in the middle of a war, which is exactly what Trump’s endless lies about Ukraine and the total absence of criticism of Putin represents.
The analysis below doesn’t even take into account the 38 journalists murdered under Putin or the many documented, heinous war crimes committed by Russian forces over the last three years in Ukraine.
AI Alert:
The statement that “Ukraine and Russia are equally corrupt” is unsupportable because it implies a moral and political equivalence that is contradicted by evidence, context, and the substantial differences in governance, accountability, and anti-corruption measures in both countries.
Here’s why:
1. Transparency and Democratic Institutions:
Ukraine, while historically struggling with corruption, has demonstrated significant progress in developing transparent and democratic institutions. It has implemented anti-corruption reforms, including the establishment of specialized anti-corruption courts, investigative bodies (e.g., the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine, NABU), and civil-society-driven transparency initiatives.
Russia, by contrast, has seen a consolidation of authoritarian rule under Putin, systematically dismantling independent media, judiciary, and oversight bodies that might check corruption.
2. Civil Society and Media Freedom:
Ukraine enjoys vibrant civil society organizations, independent media, and strong civic activism that continually pressure the government to tackle corruption. High-profile cases and corruption scandals are frequently exposed, leading to prosecution and public accountability.
Russia’s independent media landscape and civil society have been severely curtailed, activists face imprisonment, and anti-corruption organizations have been systematically suppressed or labeled as “foreign agents.”
3. International Corruption Indices:
Independent assessments clearly differentiate Ukraine and Russia. For example, Transparency International’s annual Corruption Perceptions Index consistently ranks Russia significantly worse than Ukraine, reflecting differences in governance, accountability, and public-sector integrity. While both nations have corruption issues, the scope and systemic nature of corruption in Russia are markedly deeper and more entrenched.
4. Political and Institutional Will:
Ukraine has openly acknowledged corruption as a systemic problem and is actively engaged with Western partners to implement reforms. The Ukrainian government actively participates in international anti-corruption efforts as part of its EU accession requirements, and maintains close cooperation with international organizations (IMF, EU, USAID) that demand measurable anti-corruption progress as conditions for aid and diplomatic support.
Conversely, the Russian government denies systemic corruption, resists reform pressures, and even uses corruption strategically as a political tool to consolidate power domestically and exert influence abroad.
5. Accountability and Rule of Law:
In Ukraine, despite imperfections, corruption scandals have led to public resignations, prosecutions, and criminal sentences for high-ranking officials. Russia rarely experiences genuine accountability for corruption; powerful elites closely aligned with the regime enjoy near-total immunity, with prosecutions often politically motivated rather than reflective of legitimate accountability efforts.
In short, claiming both countries are “equally corrupt” ignores substantial differences in governance, democratic accountability, civic freedoms, institutional transparency, and the seriousness of anti-corruption efforts. While corruption remains a challenge in both nations, equating the two obscures the complexities and undermines efforts and reforms that Ukraine has actively pursued and implemented—efforts conspicuously absent under Russia’s current regime.