Nobody argues that Yanukovich wasn't corrupt. Every Ukrainian president, including the current one, has been, to various degrees. My point was the people that replaced him are no better and in some respects are even worse. And these are the ones that the West used to get Ukraine to break away from Russia. Also, I would try to avoid generalizations. You constantly use Russia as an example of negative influence on Ukraine. This is just a part of the western narrative to make it look like all Ukraine inherited from centuries of shared history with Russia is corruption. It's insulting. There are about four million Ukrainians still working in Russia and feeding their families back home with their earnings. There's close to 850,000 refugees from Donbass war zone that fled to Russia and received the refugee status there. There are millions and millions of people in Ukraine that don't fit the idea that's been regularly portrayed in the western MSM as what your average Ukrainian is really about. Plus, if you know the country well, the mentality, culture and views on Ukraine's future and where it should be heading are very different, depending on where in Ukraine you live. You talk in western cliches on how Ukrainians wanted better lives for their children and grandchildren and even mention how "numerous European and US officials stood on that stage in Maidan and promised people that their lives and their country would be better if they revolted." So in your mind, it's perfectly OK for foreign politicians to do that? Really? But then again, Kremlin knew very well who was pulling the strings behind "the will of the Ukrainian people". Like that recording of the conversation between Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and the US Ambassador to Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt from February 2014, while Yanukovich was still in power, where two US State officials were matter-of-factly discussing and handing out the future positions for Maidan leaders in a new, post-Yanukovich government.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26079957
As for the post-Maidan situation, what have Ukraine actually got out of it? Economically the country is in a terrible shape, the long term economic ties with Russia are at all-time low for political reasons and EU has no intention on filling that void. More and more people leaving the country, especially the young because they see no future there and they don't feel like being sent to war zone in the southeast of the country. There are serious problems with freedom of speech like that scandal with the site Mirotvorets (Peacekeeper) that was also mentioned in the interview with the Ukrainan FM.
https://advox.globalvoices.org/2016...-of-thousands-of-war-reporters-in-the-donbas/