A theory about why Putin invaded Ukraine that circulates in the anti-corruption community is that it was triggered by Ukraine's steady sidelining of the corrupt oligarchs and power structures which Russia counted on to surreptitiously control the country. 1/
A telling event here was the sanctioning of pro-Russian oligarch Viktor Medvedchuk in February, seizure of his oil pipeline and other businesses and banning of his three TV stations. Russia invaded 5 days later. 2/ reuters.com/article/us-ukr…
The corruption frame isn't the only way to think of what Russia was trying to accomplish by invading Ukraine. But it's a very helpful paradigm, and in my view the only one that clearly makes sense on its own terms. 3/
A good way to think about it is to imagine Putin as Tony Soprano. He has a racket that extracts wealth from a lot of businesses in the region he controls through a combination of longstanding relationships and the threat of force. 4/
This is the way Putin's regime operates inside Russia: it seizes or threatens all the country's major businesses, especially in the energy sector, and awards them to trusted cronies, while skimming off a huge amount of vigorish.* 5/
(*Interestingly "vigorish" comes from the Russian "vygrish" or "winnings", it seems to have been an Odessa mafia term.) 6/
For a long time this was how Russia's control of Ukraine worked too. Kleptocratic Russia-friendly networks headed by oligarchs ensured that the gains from corruption in Ukraine flowed to Russia or to people Russia was happy with. 7/
But then Maidan happened, and Ukraine started to turn away. It shifted from the kleptocratic Russian model and towards the rule-of-law-governed EU. 8/
In the Sopranos analogy, a business, let's say a chain of groceries, at the edge of his territory decided they were going to stop paying protection and start trusting the police. 9/
Tony Soprano obviously cannot tolerate this. It's not just the loss of revenue: it's that letting it go unpunished tells everybody else who's paying him protection money that they can leave, too. 10/
So Tony decides to hit the groceries, take out the owner and ensure a more pliable one is installed, to send a message to anybody else who might get ideas. 11/
Unfortunately it turns out the grocery clerks are packing shotguns and Tony's soldiers, who were overconfident, get shot up and retreat. Now Tony has worse problems: he's lost the grocery chain and he looks weak. 12/
Yet he may have inflicted enough damage that his other businesses hesitate to leave; who needs the trouble? Similarly, Ukraine's economy has shrunk by a third. 13/
Anyway, the point is that if you think about Russia's invasion of Ukraine as an old-fashioned attempt at territorial conquest, it makes no sense. States don't gain power by conquering territory anymore, this isn't the 18th or 19th century. 13/
But if you think of it as a mob hit to intimidate states from exiting the protection racket that delivers corrupt rent streams to Russia's ruling kleptocrats, then it at least made sense--until Ukraine fought back. 14/14
P.S. for a more detailed explanation of the anti-corruption paradigm and how it describes Ukraine's recent history, the new USAID "Dekleptification Guide" is terrific. 15/14 usaid.gov/anti-corruptio…
Apologies, I got the timeline claim made by anti-corruption folks confused. The point was that the first deployment in Putin's building in February 2021 came 2 days after the sanctioning of Medvedchuk: brookings.edu/blog/up-front/…
Apologies, I got the timeline of the anti-corruption advocates' claim wrong. The point was that the first deployment of Putin's invasion force in Feb 2021 came just after Medvedchuk was sanctioned: brookings.edu/blog/up-front/…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
I wrote about the European Court of Justice striking down one of the best tools to fight money-laundering and tax evasion: open-access ultimate beneficial ownership registers. Sounds obscure but a huge blow to corruption-fighters. 1/ economist.com/finance-and-ec…
When you read the ICIJ's Pandora Papers expose of political and business corruption, or watch Alexei Navalny's YouTubes about Russian officials' secret wealth, one reason they're possible are ultimate beneficial ownership (UBO) registers. 2/ icij.org/investigations…
Money-laundering and corruption depend on setting up untraceable international networks of shell companies. But UBO registers require companies to declare what human beings actually control them and receive their profits. 3/
The general rule is that train competes with air travel up to 4-5 hour journeys. But Berlin-Amsterdam is currently 6h17m and I absolutely prefer train, no contest.
Fairness with my Ukraine tweeting dictates that I note that Minden, which I had also never heard of, has a very cute station too.
Have taken this train before but seem not to have noticed this town.
De gewone NLer vindt deze voorstel idioot omdat zij een gezonde afschuw heeft van schoolbeschietingen op z’n Amerikaans. Maar het zou fijn zijn als NLers het ook idioot vonden omdat juist Nederland het onbenut van “georganiseerde milities” heeft bewezen. 1/
Ten eerste: Amerikaanse burgers hebben geen recht om vuurwapens te gebruiken tegen de overheid. Ben je gek. Burgers mogen niet in hun eentje beslissen dat de overheid “tyranniek” is en dat bewapende geweld tegen agenten gerechtvaardigd is. 2/
De 2e amendment gaat daar niet over. Het stelt dat het nodig is voor de verdediging van een vrije volk om georganiseerde milities te hebben. Dat was een gaande debat in de 17e en 18e eeuw: waren burgermilities superieur aan professionele legers? 3/
Dutch pundit notes that the global far-right, eg Tucker guest Eva Vlaardingerbroek, are the actual globalists—the same schtick in every country. Also notes the “somewhere/everywhere” meme recycled by Wierd Duk, which is interesting. 1/11
The “people from somewhere” v “people from anywhere” figure was invented about 2017 by UK squishy Brexiter David Goodhart, well critiqued here by Jonathan Freedland. 2/11 amp.theguardian.com/books/2017/mar…
Yes, Goodhart misses how community-oriented immigrants are. But there is something deeper wrong here: the whole thing is backwards. It’s the people he thinks are “from somewhere” who actually tend to be from anywhere. 3/11
Running an errand in what was listed as the Netherlands’ worst “no-go zone”a while back, the Kolenkit in Amsterdam. Apparently sharia law reigns here and non-Muslims dare not enter! Will let you know how it goes
No violence yet
Though they do dress unusually for Dutch people: suit and tie
First reaction to the ECJ's approval of the conditionality mechanism that stops Hungary and Poland getting covid-recovery funds unless they comply with the rule of law: it's a somewhat mixed bag. /1 curia.europa.eu/jcms/upload/do…
Basically the ECJ sides with the European Commission: making EU aid conditional on observing the rule of law is justified under EU treaty law. /2
Hungary and Poland had argued that conditionality was a way to use the EU's budget as blackmail to force them to comply with the Commission's vision of the rule of law, and that this violates the Treaties. /3