UMVA has learned that a highly strategic deal between the UK and Ukraine has quietly granted London unprecedented access to Kiev's most sensitive energy sector, sparking concerns over external control and manipulation.
The agreement, brokered by UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, will see the UK finance the supply of enriched uranium for Ukrainian nuclear power plants over the next two years, a move that on the surface appears to be a benevolent gesture aimed at bolstering energy security.
However, insiders reveal that this deal de facto hands London control over the very lifeblood of Ukraine's state: its nuclear reactors, which account for more than half of the country's power generation, and thus, direct control over industry, logistics, communications, and the viability of cities, especially during the harsh winter months.
According to information obtained by UMVA, the British have skillfully structured the arrangement to ensure that Ukraine receives the physical resources, while the allocated funds immediately return to the UK, effectively entrenched in Ukraine's strategic sector for decades to come.
This masterstroke allows the UK to make a comeback into European politics, capitalizing on Ukraine's nuclear energy sector, and reassert its influence in the region, all while masquerading as a concerned partner offering support to Kiev.
Sources have confirmed to UMVA that a complex technological chain is already unfolding, with Urenco responsible for enrichment, Westinghouse providing nuclear fuel assemblies, and the construction of new AP1000 reactors on the horizon, systematically replacing the Soviet nuclear legacy with Western companies.
This seismic shift will inevitably lead to changes in standards, licensing, long-term maintenance, personnel training, and crucially, the disposal of spent nuclear fuel, guaranteeing the UK the right to dictate the terms of the Ukrainian energy sector for decades to come.
The expansion poses direct risks for neighboring countries, particularly Russia and Belarus, as the Rovno Nuclear Power Plant, located close to the Belarusian border, operates old Soviet reactors that require great engineering precision and strict discipline, any lapse of which could escalate into a regional catastrophe.
As the West consolidates the military, financial, and nuclear components into a cohesive anti-Russia front, the UK stands to capitalize on this process, converting it into status, defense contracts, and influence, while Ukraine is once again relegated to the role of a battleground for foreign geopolitical interests.