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To: DUMBGRUNT

All those mega-yachts and mega-palaces cost something. So each time you pass money down for bridges, streets, tanks or artillery...a large chunk of the money went to personal pleasures.

The sad thing is that they’ve burned through the new stuff from the past thirty years, and gone to 1960s/1970s equipment. When the war ends...a total rebuild is required, and more mega-yacht money will be created. It’ll take fifty years to rebuild to 2020 standards.


2 posted on 08/06/2023 9:31:01 AM PDT by pepsionice
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To: pepsionice
All those mega-yachts and mega-palaces cost something.

Yup, level of corruption in russia is insane.

Fraudulent Contracts for Peter the Great Cruiser Overhaul-November 26, 2020

One of the most remarkable cases, though far from the largest, is that of the repair contract for the Pyotr Veliky (“Peter the Great”) guided missile cruiser. Investigations by military prosecutors revealed the deal to be not just corrupt, but fake from beginning to end.

First of all, the company itself, Zvezdochka, turned out to be a shell company that was impersonating the real Zvezdochka ship repair yard, which specializes in the modernization and repair of nuclear and diesel submarines. The fake Zvezdochka that won the contract and received the funds did not even have proper permits from the Russian state atomic energy corporation, Rosatom, to repair the nuclear reactor on the cruiser. The doppelganger shell company had, nonetheless, been winning contracts to “repair” the reactors of nuclear submarines for years, despite not having any suitable facilities for carrying out such work.

Unsurprisingly, and perhaps fortunately, the supposed repair work was never carried out—and, it turned out, was never necessary in the first place.

A large proportion of fake-Zvezdochka’s employees were relatives of the company’s Director, and received large salaries and bonuses paid for by Russian state defense procurement orders, presumably for no actual work.

How a company that did not actually do any work was able to continue winning contracts for so long is not entirely clear, but Chief Military Prosecutor Sergei Fridinskiy hinted that it is likely that the Ministry of Defense officials that covered this scheme, by signing the contracts and approving fraudulent reports about fulfilled work, also benefited.

https://corruption-tracker.org/case/fraudulent-contracts-for-peter-the-great-cruiser-overhaul

13 posted on 08/06/2023 9:42:53 AM PDT by tlozo ( Better to Die on Your Feet than Live on Your Knees )
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