On Thursday the arrests were announced of Vadim Shamarin, the deputy chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces and Vladimir Verteletsky, a senior procurement officer at the ministry.
Shamarin was arrested on suspicion of having accepted bribes over a period of seven years worth 36 million rubles (€370,000) from the management of a telephone factory, whereas Verteletsky was arrested for allegedly accepting contracted work that was incomplete, costing the Russian military over 70 million rubles (€720,000).
Shamarin and Verteletsky’s are the latest in a series of arrests that has also included Deputy Defence Minister Timur Ivanov, Yury Kuznetsov, the chief of the Russian Defence Ministry’s Main Personnel Directorate, and General Ivan Popov, on bribery, trading state secrets and fraud charges respectively. If found guilty, each of them could face up to 15 years in prison.
Military expert Yury Fyodorov told Novaya Europe that the slew of arrests most likely stemmed from a “confrontation between clans and factions within the ministry”, adding that the infighting was only being portrayed as a fight against corruption to the public, while in fact all signs point towards a “power struggle” between law enforcement agencies, particularly the Defence Ministry and the state security agencies.