EU freezes €29.7 billion in Ukraine aid after Zelensky undermines anti-corruption agencies
- The EU froze €29.7 billion in aid after Ukraine passed laws stripping independence from anti-corruption agencies, signaling disapproval of Zelensky’s undermining of accountability.
- Zelensky reversed course within 24 hours under Western pressure, submitting new legislation to restore agency autonomy, but trust in Ukraine’s commitment to reform is damaged.
- The crisis began when Zelensky-aligned forces raided anti-corruption offices, followed by swift parliamentary approval of laws weakening their independence, sparking protests.
- Western leaders, including the EU and U.S., condemned the move, forcing Zelensky to backtrack, although proposed reforms still allow future interference.
- The incident exposes Ukraine’s reliance on Western aid despite ongoing corruption, raising questions about continued financial support without genuine reform.
The European Union has suspended €29.7 billion in critical financial aid after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's government passed legislation stripping independence from Ukraine’s top anti-corruption agencies. The freeze, enacted on July 24, targets emergency loans from frozen Russian assets and broader financial support mechanisms, signaling Brussels’ refusal to bankroll a government accused of sabotaging its own anti-graft institutions. After fierce domestic protests and Western pressure, Zelensky reversed course within 24 hours, submitting new legislation to restore autonomy—but the damage to Ukraine’s credibility may already be done.
The move exposes a glaring hypocrisy in Western support for Ukraine, where taxpayer-funded aid continues to flow despite
rampant corruption at the highest levels. The U.S. and other nations must ask: Why are we propping up a regime that actively dismantles accountability while begging for billions?
Zelensky’s power grab backfires
The crisis began on July 21, when Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU)—an agency loyal to Zelensky—raided the offices of the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and inspected the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO). These agencies, established after Ukraine’s 2014 Revolution of Dignity, were designed to root out systemic graft. But their independence became a liability for Zelensky when they targeted his inner circle, including former Deputy Prime Minister Alexey Chernyshov, a key ally accused of corruption.
By July 22, Ukraine’s parliament, dominated by Zelensky loyalists, passed a bill gutting NABU and SAPO’s autonomy. Zelensky signed it into law on July 23, sparking immediate backlash. Roughly 2,000 protesters flooded Kyiv’s streets, with rallies spreading to other cities—marking the first major wartime dissent against Zelensky’s leadership.
The
EU reacted swiftly. "All financial assistance has been put on hold," confirmed Ukrainian government sources, citing Brussels’ ultimatum. The suspension halts two key programs: the €17.2 billion ERA (Extraordinary Revenue Acceleration for Ukraine) fund, drawn from frozen Russian assets, and the €12.5 billion Ukraine Facility, a lifeline for the war-torn economy.
Western pressure forces a retreat
Facing condemnation from the EU, the U.S., and even British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Zelensky scrambled to contain the fallout. On July 24, he submitted a new draft law claiming to "strengthen" NABU and SAPO’s powers in a transparent attempt to placate Western donors. While the bill restores nominal independence, it allows the SBU to inspect anti-corruption staff within six months, leaving the door open for future interference.
The episode reveals Zelensky’s true priorities: protecting his cronies, not combating corruption. "Zelensky has long tried to establish control over NABU and SAPO," noted TASS, highlighting his desperation to neutralize investigators probing his allies. Opposition lawmakers warn more indictments loom, threatening Zelensky’s political survival.
The EU’s suspension is a rare display of accountability, and it's one that Washington should emulate. For years, U.S. taxpayers have bankrolled Ukraine’s government despite glaring corruption, including Zelensky’s refusal to appoint reformist Oleksandr Tsyvinskyi to lead the Economic Security Bureau. The IMF, too, has warned that Ukraine risks losing $15.6 billion in aid unless it cleans house.
Yet Zelensky’s last-minute reversal—driven by financial coercion, not principle—proves he cannot be trusted. The revised law, expected to pass on July 31, is a façade. As Marta Kos, the EU’s commissioner for expansion, stated, Brussels remains "seriously concerned" about political meddling in anti-corruption efforts.
Stop funding corruption
The EU’s aid freeze should serve as a wake-up call. Ukraine’s government, like many regimes propped up by Western largesse, exploits foreign aid to entrench its power while paying lip service to reform. The U.S. must follow Brussels’ lead: No more blank checks for Zelensky until NABU and SAPO operate without fear of SBU raids or presidential interference.
If Ukraine wants Western support, it must prove it’s not just another corrupt regime masquerading as a democracy. Until then, every dollar sent to Kyiv is a dollar wasted—or worse, a dollar enabling the very
corruption Zelensky vowed to destroy.
Sources for this article include:
YourNews.com
TASS.com
NYPost.com