For the second time in a yr, there have been public protests in Ukraine in response to a choice by the nation’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky.
In July 2025, protests erupted when Zelensky tried to curb the powers of two unbiased corruption businesses, forcing him to backtrack. The set off for the most recent protests was the dismissal of Ukraine’s standard defence minister, Mykhailo Fedorov.
This isn’t the primary time Zelensky has reshuffled his defence crew. Oleksii Reznikov, who had been defence minister since 2021, was dismissed in 2023 following a string of high-profile corruption scandals.
He was changed by Rustem Umerov who, after two years in workplace, was moved to the position of secretary of Ukraine’s Nationwide Safety and Defence Council, as a part of a full-scale cupboard reshuffle.
Umerov’s alternative, former prime minister Denys Shmyhal, lasted virtually precisely six months earlier than one other reshuffle linked to the lengthy fallout from the corruption scandals of summer season 2025. Shmyhal was moved to the vitality ministry and changed by Fedorov.
What distinguishes Fedorov’s ousting is that that is the primary time a reshuffle has been carried out for causes of inner disagreement inside Zelensky’s core crew.
In a press convention on July 16, Fedorov accused the commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, Oleksandr Syrskyi, of blocking his reform initiatives and dividing the nation. Their rift had turn out to be more and more public. Fedorov and Syrskyi had apparently every demanded that the opposite be dismissed, somewhat than discovering the compromise Zelensky needed.

Olivier Matthys / EPA
That the president sided with the commander-in-chief somewhat than his defence minister seemingly defies all logic. Fedorov had been an advocate of drone warfare throughout his earlier tenure as Ukraine’s minister for digital transformation, a task he assumed initially of Zelensky’s tenure as president in 2019.
Since Fedorov was appointed minister of defence in January, Ukraine has made vital progress in stalling Russia’s momentum within the conflict. Key to this has been an intensified marketing campaign of strikes towards Russian oil infrastructure – one of many backbones of the nation’s conflict economic system.
Fedorov additionally moved to reform procurement insurance policies within the defence ministry. In June, he acknowledged that his crew’s efforts to implement aggressive tendering for defence contracts had saved greater than US$100 million (£74 million) by slicing the prices of 155mm artillery shells.
That is one possible supply of Fedorov’s battle with Syrskyi, who decides which weapons programs and army tools ought to be procured. Greater than a problem of corruption, the rift is about management – and a conflict of cultures between the moderniser, Fedorov, and the extra conventional army management round Syrskyi.
After his dismissal, Fedorov apparently refused to proceed in an advisory position for Zelensky. Two key advisors within the defence ministry, Serhii “Flash” Beskrestnov and Serhii Sternenko, in addition to the deputy commander of the air power, Pavlo Yelizarov, have all now resigned.
These developments additional underline the inner strategic disagreements over the course of Ukraine’s conflict effort.
Fedorov’s alternative
Zelensky’s preliminary alternative for his subsequent defence minister was Ihor Klymenko, who apparently declined the position and is set to take up the submit of secretary of Ukraine’s Nationwide Safety and Defence Council as a substitute.
As a former nationwide police chief who had been Ukraine’s inside minister since 2023, Klymenko was seen as somebody who might resolve Ukraine’s continued recruitment disaster. That is arguably the realm during which Fedorov did not make enough progress.
In mild of sustained rumours about a brand new mobilisation of Russian troops for the conflict within the autumn, it’s clear that Ukraine’s manpower downside is turning into extra acute and wishes an pressing decision.
In accordance with Fedorov’s prognosis of the size of the issue, 2 million Ukrainians are presently needed for draft evasion, and 200,000 troopers are absent with out official depart.
Much less clear, nonetheless, is why Klymenko was touted for the position. As inside minister, he was not less than a part of the issue brought on by so-called “busification” – the forcible seizure of military-age Ukrainian males by recruitment officers. Klymenko has persistently maintained that these officers have acted inside the boundaries of martial legislation.
Klymenko’s refusal to simply accept the place may additionally have been an implicit acknowledgement of how tough a job any reform of recruitment can be. That is notably the case given Zelensky’s extremely public dedication to eradicating busification, throughout his press convention with the outgoing British prime minister, Keir Starmer, in Kyiv on July 16.

Sergey Dolzhenko / EPA
Yevhenii Khmara, a serious normal and performing head of the Ukrainian intelligence service SBU, has now been appointed as performing defence minister. Given Kharma’s earlier position in supporting Ukraine’s intensifying air marketing campaign towards Russia, his appointment placates critics of the Fedorov dismissal. These embody members of Zelensky’s personal social gathering, who noticed Klymenko as insufficiently aligned with Fedorov’s technique within the conflict.
However a realignment with Fedorov’s imaginative and prescient of the way to win the conflict will do little to deal with both the recruitment subject or the underlying battle with Syrskyi. That this may possible fester might be notably destabilising, as a result of the timeline in the direction of Kharma’s parliamentary affirmation is unclear.
Beneath Ukrainian legislation, Kharma first has to resign from lively army service earlier than he can tackle the civilian position of defence minister. He then has to be formally nominated by the president, after which the Ukrainian parliament should approve his appointment.
Just like the summer season 2025 corruption disaster, Zelensky will most likely climate this storm. However the worth he’s prone to pay is an additional erosion of his authority – and a shrinking of his interior circle of trusted advisors.
That is an pointless and unwelcome distraction from a defence effort that had lastly appeared to place Ukraine on the entrance foot, for the primary time for the reason that finish of 2022.








