Zelenskyy reconsidering Ukraine's defense reshuffle as Fedorov accuses army chief of splitting the country
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy began reconsidering his wartime cabinet shake-up on July 17 under pressure from civil society and the armed forces, while dismissed Defence Minister Mykhailo Fedorov publicly blamed Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi for obstructing military reform and 'splitting the country'
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Summary
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy moved to rethink his July 15 decision to fire Defence Minister Mykhailo Fedorov by July 17, as protests spread in Kyiv and other cities and commanders pushed back against the reshuffle. Fedorov, in a press conference on July 16, publicly accused Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi of obstructing military reform and "splitting the country," a direct public challenge from a senior official that deepened the crisis. Ukraine simultaneously struck Moscow with roughly 200 drones overnight, its largest such attack in two years, even as the government navigated the internal confrontation. Zelenskyy's office urged patience while signalling possible course corrections.
Why it matters
Fedorov led Ukraine's drone warfare programme, widely credited with shifting battlefield dynamics against Russia. Public rupture between Ukraine's president and a dismissed minister, aired during active war, signals unusual institutional strain and could complicate Western partners' reading of Ukrainian political cohesion.
What to watch
- Whether Zelenskyy reverses or modifies the Fedorov dismissal, or finds a compromise role for him
- How Syrskyi responds to Fedorov's public accusations, and whether the military command stays unified
- Whether street protests sustain beyond the initial surge or dissipate
- How the episode affects Western confidence in Ukraine's wartime governance