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By Vincent Cordova | Cordova 2028
July 30, 2025
7-29-2025
Who’s Really Pulling the Strings? Ukraine’s Sanctions on China Might Serve Wall Street More Than Kyiv
In a time of existential war, every move should count toward national survival. So why would Ukraine—already stretched thin—sanction China, one of the world’s largest superpowers, while locked in a brutal fight against Russia?
At first glance, it seems irrational. But in today’s geopolitical landscape, “irrational” is often just well-disguised profit .
Sanctioning China: A Strategic Blunder?
China has supplied Russia with key dual-use components, and Ukraine’s decision to sanction several Chinese firms in 2025 was framed as a bold stance against indirect military support. But let’s be clear: Ukraine has no leverage over China . Unlike the EU or U.S., it lacks the economic and diplomatic muscle to influence Chinese policy.
The likely outcome? China doubles down on its support for Russia , perhaps more openly now, under the banner of defending its businesses and sovereignty. Ukraine weakens its diplomatic options, invites retaliation, and accelerates the very war machine it’s trying to stop.
So why do it?
Enter the Real Decision-Makers: Private Equity & Institutional Holders
We must ask who benefits when nations make decisions that sabotage their own interests. The answer too often traces back to the same source: Wall Street, private equity firms, and institutional holders with financial control over both policy and war.
- BlackRock and Goldman Sachs have already positioned themselves for massive post-war reconstruction contracts in Ukraine. This is no secret—it was announced publicly in early 2023 and reaffirmed in 2024.
- IMF loans and privatization demands are restructuring Ukraine’s economy, with Western capital acquiring infrastructure, energy, agriculture, and land.
- These firms do not act in the interest of sovereign nations. They act to maximize profit , even if it means pushing Ukraine into further isolation or ensuring the war continues just long enough to secure contracts and debt obligations.
Divide and Profit: A Timeless Strategy
Sanctioning China achieves multiple goals—for investors:
- Deeper Dependence
Ukraine becomes even more reliant on U.S. and EU capital, as ties with non-aligned nations are severed.
- Justification for Escalation
As China moves closer to Russia, it creates the perception of a growing global threat—useful for increasing Western military budgets and defense contractor profits.
- Asset Access in Chaos
Continued instability allows Western investors to buy low and sell high —acquiring Ukrainian assets at depressed wartime values for post-war exploitation.
It’s not about freedom. It’s about market capture through chaos .
The Playbook of Silent Control
The world isn’t just watching a war. We’re witnessing a coordinated economic takeover . Private equity firms and institutional investors have embedded themselves into national decision-making— not through elected office , but through financial dependency, lobbying, and debt diplomacy .
They shape decisions like these—sanctions that backfire, peace talks that stall, budgets that bleed. All while their portfolios grow.
Final Thought
Ukraine’s struggle against invasion is real. But so is the invisible hand behind the curtain , shaping the country’s fate for financial gain. Until we confront that reality, nations will keep fighting wars they don’t control —while the ones who do never spill a drop of blood, only ink on a balance sheet.
April 18, 2025 – Decree Nos. 246/2025 & 247/2025
On this date, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed two linked decrees under the decision of Ukraine’s National Security and Defence Council to impose sanctions on a number of individuals and legal entities. Notably, the sanctions included three Chinese companies —Beijing Aviation & Aerospace Xianghui Technology Co. Ltd, Rui Jin Machinery Co. Ltd, and Zhongfu Shenying Carbon Fiber Xining Co. Ltd—for allegedly supplying components used in Russia’s Iskander missiles that struck Kharkiv. The measures included frozen assets and a ban on doing business in
June 20, 2025 – Decree No. 415/2025
President Zelenskyy signed this decree targeting 56 individuals and 55 entities , including six Chinese companies (based in Hong Kong, Shandong, and Shenzhen), for their involvement in the production of Russian drones such as the Geran (Shahed), Orlan‑10, SuperCam, and FPV systems, and for sanctions evasion schemes.
July 8, 2025 – Decree No. 466/2025
Under this decree, five Chinese companies were added to Ukraine’s sanctions list. These firms—China Silk Road International Trade (Tianjin), Suzhou ECOD Precision Manufacturing, Shenzhen Royo Technology, Shenzhen Jinduoban Technology, and Ningbo BLIN Machinery—were accused of supplying components found in downed Shahed drones used in the mass drone attacks on Kyiv in early July.
Key Insights
- Ukraine’s April sanctions were the first formal action against Chinese firms directly accused of aiding Russia’s missile
- The June sanctions expanded the scope significantly, implicating Chinese companies alongside Russian and Belarusian firms in the drone supply chain .
- The July sanctions focused specifically on Chinese suppliers connected to Shahed drone components recovered during the major drone assault on Kyiv.
-Vincent Cordova
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