Geoffrey Pyatt, then the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, called Shokin’s office “an obstacle” to fighting corruption in a September 2015 speech. Pyatt spoke of “one glaring problem” undermining the fight against corruption, adding: “That obstacle is the failure of the institution of the Prosecutor General of Ukraine to successfully fight internal corruption. Rather than supporting Ukraine’s reforms and working to root out corruption, corrupt actors within the Prosecutor General’s office are making things worse by openly and aggressively undermining reform.” [Pyatt remarks at the Odesa Financial Forum, 9/24/15]
State Department briefing memo prepared for Biden’s visit stated he should call for the “removal of Prosecutor General Shokin” in meetings with Ukraine’s leaders. The memo, generated for Biden’s meeting with Poroshenko during the December 2015 Ukraine trip, reads in part under the heading “Background” that anti-corruption reform requires the “removal of Prosecutor General Shokin, who is widely regarded as an obstacle to fighting corruption, if not a source of the problem.” Under “Talking Points,” the document states that “anti-corruption efforts … will also require changing the Prosecutor General who is damaging your credibility and obstructing the fight against corruption.” Similar language appears in a separate memo for Biden’s meeting with then-Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk. [State Department memo, 11/22/15; Media Matters, 9/18/23]
Pyatt testified that leveraging aid to oust Shokin was “U.S. government policy.” Pyatt said in a 2020 congressional deposition that “it wasn’t Vice President Biden who conditioned the assistance” but rather “our interagency policy” based on information provided by Ukraine civil society contacts and the U.S. intelligence community and Justice Department. He further described it as “U.S. government policy” and agreed that “the condition to remove Shokin had been conveyed to Ukrainian officials prior to December 2015, and then it was reiterated by Vice President Biden in December 2015, on this trip.” [Pyatt deposition, 9/22/20; Media Matters, 9/18/23]
Victoria Nuland, assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs in 2015-16, testified that leveraging aid to dismiss Shokin was “U.S. government policy.” Nuland, who oversaw diplomacy in Ukraine at the time, agreed during a 2020 congressional deposition that it was U.S government policy “to condition a loan guarantee on the removal of Prosecutor General Shokin” and that the policy “was developed through the interagency process.” [Nuland deposition, 9/3/20; Media Matters, 9/18/23]
Three GOP senators signed a February 2016 letter calling for “urgent reforms to the Prosecutor General’s office.” CNN reported that a letter sent by members of the Senate Ukraine Caucus to Poroshenko urged him to “press ahead with urgent reforms to the Prosecutor General’s office and judiciary” to combat corruption. It was signed by five Democrats and three Republicans, including Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI). [CNN, 10/3/19]
Bush-appointed diplomat John Herbst testified to widespread support for ousting Shokin and praised Biden for helping to push him out. Herbst, a former ambassador to Ukraine in the George W. Bush administration, testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee shortly before Shokin’s dismissal that in 2015, Ukrainian reformers had begun describing Shokin as a “compromised figure” and that “by late fall of 2015, the EU and the United States joined the chorus of those seeking Mr. Shokin’s removal as the start of an overall reform of the Procurator General’s Office.” He praised Biden and referenced his December 2015 meeting with Ukraine’s leaders, saying, that the vice president“has devoted a great deal of time to promoting reform in Ukraine, and he has not been reluctant to tell Mr. Poroshenko and Mr. Yatsenyuk when they have shirked the hard choices that need to be made. This was evident in the conversations regarding Mr. Shokin and the Office of the Procurator General.” [Senate transcript, 3/15/16]
New York Times report contemporaneous with Shokin’s removal said U.S. “had for months called for” Shokin’s dismissal over corruption. The Times reported after Ukraine’s parliament voted to remove the prosecutor general, “the United States … had for months called for the ousting of Mr. Shokin, who was widely criticized for turning a blind eye to corrupt practices and for defending the interests of a venal and entrenched elite.” The paper also referred to Shokin’s “visible signs of corruption” and reported that he was seen by Ukrainian reformers and Western diplomats “as a worrying indicator of a return to past corrupt practices.” [The New York Times, 3/29/16]
Alina Romanowski, a diplomat later appointed by Trump, testified that Shokin had been “widely seen as corrupt.” Romanowski, then the State Department’s coordinator of U.S. assistance to Europe and Eurasia and subsequently the Trump administration’s ambassador to Kuwait, testified during a June 2016 subcommittee hearing that “in Ukraine, President Poroshenko and the Rada replaced a Prosecutor-General widely seen as corrupt.” [CNN, 10/3/19]
George Kent, Pyatt’s deputy in Kyiv, testified that pushing for Shokin’s dismissal was the “consensus view.” Kent, who served as deputy chief of mission in Kyiv, Ukraine, from 2015 to 2018 and then oversaw U.S. foreign policy in the country as deputy assistant secretary of state, testified during Trump’s 2019 impeachment inquiry that “what former Vice President Biden requested of former President of Ukraine [Petro] Poroshenko was the removal of a corrupt prosecutor general, Viktor Shokin, who had undermined a program of assistance that we had spent, again, U.S. taxpayer money to try to build an independent investigator unit to go after corrupt prosecutors.” He also stated in his deposition, “it was the consensus view that Shokin needed to be removed so that the stated goal of reform of the prosecutor general system could move forward.” [Kent testimony, 11/13/2019; Kent deposition, 10/15/19; Media Matters, 9/13/23]
Kent further testified that Pyatt and Nuland had originated the idea to leverage the aid to get Shokin fired. “To the best of my knowledge, the idea came from Pyatt in discussion with Assistant Secretary Nuland and then was pitched to the Office of the Vice President,” Kent said in his deposition. [Kent deposition, 10/15/19; Media Matters, 9/13/23]
Trump appointee Kurt Volker testified that Biden “was representing U.S. policy” when he pushed for Shokin’s firing. Volker, a former diplomat who served in the Bush administration and then as the U.S. special representative for Ukraine negotiations during the Trump administration, said in a deposition for Trump’s impeachment inquiry, “When Vice President Biden made those representations to President Poroshenko he was representing U.S. policy at the time.” He went on to say that Shokin’s “reputation is one of a prosecutor general who was protecting certain interests rather than prosecuting them” and reiterated that Biden had been “executing U.S. policy at the time and what was widely understood internationally to be the right policy, right.” [Volker deposition, 10/3/19; Media Matters, 9/13/23]
Marie Yovanovitch, U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, testified that the U.S. and Western consensus was that “Mr. Shokin as prosecutor general was not doing his job.” Yovanovitch, who served as U.S. ambassador to Ukraine from 2016 to 2019, similarly testified that “Vice President Biden, the IMF, pretty much every country that is present in Ukraine all felt that Mr. Shokin as prosecutor general was not doing his job,” leading to calls for his firing. [Yovanovitch deposition, 10/11/19; Media Matters, 9/13/23]