Analysis
The link between Russian oligarchs, corruption, and the stability of Putin’s regime is extensively corroborated by investigations (e.g., Panama Papers, Magnitsky case) and academic research. However, by 2018, Europe *had* begun addressing these issues—though inconsistently—through measures like the **EU Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime** (adopted in 2020 but debated earlier) and **Anti-Money Laundering Directives** (e.g., 4AMLD in 2015, 5AMLD in 2018). Khodorkovsky’s framing implies uniform inaction, ignoring nuanced progress (e.g., freezing some assets post-2014 Crimea sanctions) and jurisdictional variations (e.g., UK’s London ‘Londongrad’ problem vs. Baltic states’ reforms). His call for *targeted oligarch sanctions* predated their large-scale adoption post-2022 Ukraine invasion, but was aligned with expert recommendations at the time.
Background
Mikhail Khodorkovsky, a former Russian oligarch turned Putin critic, has firsthand experience with the intersection of politics and corruption in Russia, having been imprisoned on widely criticized charges (2003–2013). His 2018 testimony occurred amid growing but fragmented European efforts to counter illicit Russian financial flows, accelerated by revelations like the **$230B+ 'Russian Laundromat'** (2014–2017) and **Troika Dialog** scandals. The EU’s approach remained constrained by legal hurdles, member-state divisions (e.g., Cyprus, Malta’s golden passport schemes), and reliance on Russian energy imports.
Verdict summary
Khodorkovsky’s claim about systemic corruption and oligarchic support for Putin’s regime is well-documented, but the assertion that Europe was *actively* 'turning a blind eye' in 2018 oversimplifies a complex, evolving policy landscape.