Tag: Prigozhin

  • Prigozhin and Putin’s payback

    Prigozhin and Putin’s payback

    Revenge is a dreaded forte of Russian President Vladimir Putin. He deals the hand coldly and assuredly. In the wake of the mutiny in his country last June, Russia watchers branded Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin a ‘dead man walking.’ Prigozhin had led his Wagner mercenary troops to rebel again Russian military command, seized a southern Russian city and threatened to overrun Moscow – coming within 250 kilometres of the capital before the mutiny was pulled at the instance of a hurried pact that wrung humiliating concessions out of Mr. Putin. The Russian leader survived the rebellion appearing demystified and weakened. The Putin mystique was dented, but pundits predicted it wasn’t the final word. The final word, as is seems, was Prigozhin’s mangled remains in a plane wreckage, unless fate wrought a chilling coincidence on the mercenary warlord.

    Prigozhin, 62, was a longtime ally of the Russian strongman and Wagner, his 25,000-strong private army, has been a major fighting force for Russia in her invasion of Ukraine that elicited worldwide condemnation. When Prigozhin led his army in the June mutiny, Putin termed the action a betrayal and stab in the back. Russia watchers projected the warlord had a short life expectancy thereafter, given Putin’s reputation for vengeance. That projection appeared borne out last Wednesday with Prigozhin’s death in a plane crash in which all seven passengers and three crew perished. The Embraer Legacy business jet belonging to Prigozhin was travelling from Moscow to St. Petersburg when it crashed in Tver region, mid-way between Moscow and St. Petersburg and some 50 kilometres away from a countryside mansion of Mr. Putin in northern Russia. The aircraft was airborne for less than half an hour before it dropped from the sky.

    Read Also: Wagner boss made mistakes, says Putin

    Wednesday’s crash occurred exactly two months after the Wagner mutiny that Prigozhin led on 23rd June. The mercenary army fought alongside the Russian military in Ukraine and was associated with some of the worst atrocities of the conflict. But Prigozhin’s relationship with the Kremlin soured over the war’s high mortality rate, poor equipment and unpaid wages. He questioned the Kremlin’s motives for the invasion and accused Russian military bosses of incompetence. Prigozhin demanded  the sack of the military high command but was spurned by Putin, which was what ostensibly prompted the Wagner rebellion. After taking Rostov, the mercenary army marched north towards Moscow, forcing the capital into a lockdown before Belarus President Alexsandr Lukashenko brokered a deal that ended the standoff on 24th June. That deal shielded Prigozhin from direct reprisal from the Kremlin for the rebellion and allowed his fighters to move to neighbouring Belarus, join the Russian army or just retire home. Prigozhin himself agreed to relocate to Belarus, but he apparently was able to move freely within Russia with his plane reportedly flying back and forth. Reports said following the botched mutiny, he was warned his life was in danger. He was advised not to go into high buildings for fear of accidents, and he took painstaking care over his security including using body doubles and staging decoy itineraries. Besides Ukraine, Wagner is active in the Mideast, Central and West Africa. Early last week, Prigozhin posted a video in which he claimed to have just visited Africa and touted his army’s exploits, saying it was “making Russia even greater on all continents, and Africa even more free.”

    With his elaborate security measures, however, the mercenary chief couldn’t avoid his waterloo. His Embraer jet crashed and crushed all 10 souls on board after taking off from Moscow en route to St. Petersburg. Reports cited tracking data that showed the Prigozhin-linked plane rose to an altitude of some 29,000 feet after take-off from Moscow, before data transmission stopped as the aircraft plunged to zero feet. A burning wreckage of the plane was located in a field. Russian aviation authorities affirmed that Prigozhin’s name was on the manifest, but there was uncertainty as to whether he definitely was  on board as he reportedly was in the habit of checking-in for a particular flight while taking another flight as security precaution. Moreover, there were reports of a second Prigozhin-linked plane that air-returned after zig-zagging in Moscow sky following the crash of the other jet. There were speculations the warlord cheated death by travelling in a different plane, or even that he staged a ruse to escape into peaceful exile. A pro-Wagner medium said it was “premature” to say he had died because he regularly “confused everyone” by changing his travel plans at the last minute. But optimism about the warlord’s chances of survival waned when close associates couldn’t reach him in the crash aftermath.

    As for the crashed plane, images showed plumes of black smoke bellowing into the sky from the fireball wreckage. Responders said eight bodies were recovered and were in horrible state of mutilation, with one having the head totally severed and another with the face smashed in. A Wagner-linked social media channel reported that the jet was shot down by air defences, and that nearby residents heard loud bangs and saw vapour trails just before the crash. Inside sources in Russia, however, denied evidence of smoke trails in visuals of the crashing jet. Intelligence reports also refuted claims that the plane was downed by surface-to-air missile, arguing more for the likelihood of an explosion on board the aircraft before it bowed to gravity.

    On the day of the crash, President Putin who rarely travels to the Russian regions was in Kursk, near the Ukrainian border, on an unannounced trip to speak at an event marking the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Kursk in World War II. There were reports that sometime before the news of the crash broke, he was observed anxiously checking his watch on one arm, only to discomfittingly realise it was on the other arm. And as the news of the crash made the rounds, the Russian strongman stood in front of an orchestra. Russia experts ruled that ominous because a nickname for Wagner forces is ‘the orchestra.’ When he broke his silence some 24 hours later over the crash, Mr. Putin confirmed the death of Prigozhin. He lauded the warlord’s record as leader of Wagner that he said had “made a significant contribution to our common cause.” The Russian leader said “initial data” indicated that top Wagner figures were on board and expressed condolences to the families of all 10 people who died. “I knew Prigozhin from a long time, from early 1990s. He had a difficult path and made serious mistakes in his life. But he got results – for himself, and for the common cause when I asked him, like in the last few months,” he added. Prigozhin, according to him, was a “talented businessman…with a difficult destiny.”

    To be sure, there was nothing concrete showing the Russian leader had a hand in the crash that killed Prigozhin. But many Russia watchers would argue the mishap was retributive for the June mutiny – if not at the direct instance of Putin, at that of the Russian military generals the Wagner boss took upon. It was instructive, for instance, that the mercenary chief got killed exactly two months after the rebellion. Besides the factor of sheer retribution, there was suspicion Moscow aimed at decapitating Wagner to strengthen the hand of Russian military. After all, weakening Wagner inside Russia need not significantly affect its activities in foreign countries where it remained an important arm of Kremlin power. Besides, tighter Kremlin control over the group could also allow for integrating its non-military operations, such as lucrative mining contracts in African countries, in Russian budget. All these, however, isn’t to rule out the possibility that Prigozhin’s many foes may have orchestrated his death without a direct order from Mr. Putin.

    But Prigozhin was only a victim of cannibalistic dynamics of power. He was not like former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko, who fled Russia on exile and was pursued to the United Kingdom where lethal polonium was slipped into his drink and he died of acute radiation in 2006. That killing fostered a diplomatic row between the UK and Russia. Neither was Prigozhin like Russian tax lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who was abused in Moscow prison leading to his death in 2009, and in whose memory the United States enacted the Magnitsky Act (2016) to sanction rights offenders across the world. Prigozhin was a former Putin propagandist and cook, now served his patron ‘for dinner.’ He rode the tiger and has ended up in its belly.

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  • Wagner leader Prigozhin feared killed in crash

    Wagner leader Prigozhin feared killed in crash

    Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin was feared killed yesterday along with nine others.

    His death in a plane crash in Russia 30 minutes after take off, came a few days after appearing in a video at a time he was believed to be in Congo, showed up in Mali, dressed in military fatigue.

    He claimed that the arrival of its team in Mali is to assist the Mali military government to dislodge terrorists and “any other interest”.

    The Federal Agency for Air Transport of Russia has reportedly initiated an investigation into the crash that happened in the Tver Region, according to Russia’s Tass news agency.

    Emergency response services told TASS that four bodies have been found. The plane reportedly caught fire after hitting the ground and burned up. It had been in flight less than 30 minutes.

    Unconfirmed media reports said the jet belonged to Prigozhin.

    Earlier, a Wagner-linked Telegram channel Grey Zone reported that the jet was shot down by air defences in Tver region, north of Moscow.

    Grey Zone said local residents heard two bangs before the crash and saw two vapour trails.

    The aircraft had been in the air for less than half an hour, it said.

    Tass news agency said the plane caught fire on hitting the ground, adding that four bodies had already been found.

    Mali and Burkina Faso, also ruled by military junta, have both declared their backing for the Niger coupists, who are also claimed to be lobbying the Wagner Group.

    Prigozhin, whose private military force Wagner fought alongside Russia’s regular army in Ukraine, mounted a short-lived armed mutiny against Russia’s military leadership in late June.

    After the mutiny, the Kremlin said he would be exiled to Belarus, and his fighters would might retire, follow him there or join the Russian military.

    Read Also: 18 things to know about Wagner boss Prigozhin

    President Putin’s initial reaction to his challenge to Russia’s defence establishment was vitriolic, calling it a betrayal and a stab in the back in a video message on 24 June.

    “Revenge”, commented CIA director William Burns, “is a dish Putin prefers served cold” – or words to that effect.

    None of this, of course, is proof that Prigozhin and his entourage were deliberately targeted.

    But given the circumstances any claims that his demise, if confirmed, was an accident will see a lot of eyebrows raised.

    U.S. President Joe Biden said he was “not surprised” by news of Prigozhin’s possible death.

  • 18 things to know about Wagner boss Prigozhin

    18 things to know about Wagner boss Prigozhin

    The chief of Russian mercenary group Wagner, Yevgeny Prigozhin, is believed to have been killed in a plane crash, Russian state media reported Wednesday.

    The aircraft, a business jet, crashed in the Tver region northwest of Moscow, with all 10 people onboard killed, according to Russian authorities.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Wagner boss Prigozhin feared dead in plane crash

    While Russian officials said that Prigozhin was on the passenger list, it was not immediately clear if he was in the aircraft.

    Here are 18 things to know about Wagner boss Prigozhin:

    1. Yevgeny Prigozhin was a Russian oligarch, mercenary leader, and former close confidant of Russian president Vladimir Putin until he launched a rebellion in June 2023.
    2. Prigozhin was sometimes called “Putin’s chef”, as he owned restaurants and catering companies that provided services for the Kremlin.
    3. Once a convict in the Soviet Union, Prigozhin controlled a network of influential companies, notably the Wagner private military company, which was supported by the Russian state, as well as three companies accused of interference in the 2016 and 2018 US elections.
    4. According to a 2022 investigation by Bellingcat, The Insider, and Der Spiegel, Prigozhin’s activities “are tightly integrated with Russia’s Defence Ministry and its intelligence arm, the GRU”.
    5. After years of denying links to the Wagner Group, in September 2022 he confirmed that he was its founder.
    6. He stated that he founded it in May 2014, to support Russian proxy forces in the Donbas War against Ukraine.
    7. This admission was prompted by a viral video in 2022 in which Prigozhin was shown at a Russian prison recruiting inmates, promising them freedom if they served six months with the Wagner Group.
    8. His Wagner Group played an important role in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
    9. It also supported Russian interests in Syria, Libya, the Central African Republic and several other countries.
    10. In November 2022, Prigozhin also admitted his role in Russian interference in US elections, saying such operations would continue.
    11. In February 2023, he stated he was the founder and long-time manager of the Internet Research Agency, a Russian company accused of online propaganda and disinformation.
    12. The FBI offered a reward of up to $250,000 for information leading to the arrest of Prigozhin.
    13. In October 2020, the European Union (EU) imposed sanctions against Prigozhin in connection with his financing of the activities of Wagner Group in Libya.
    14. In April 2022, new sanctions were imposed on him by the EU because of his role in the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
    15. Prigozhin openly criticized the Russian Defense Ministry for corruption and for mishandling the war against Ukraine.
    16. On 23 June 2023, he used the Wagner Group to launch a rebellion against the Russian military leadership, accusing the Defense Ministry of shelling Wagner soldiers.
    17. Wagner captured the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don and headed for Moscow.
    18. Negotiations led to the rebellion being called off the following day. Prigozhin agreed to move to Belarus and criminal charges against him for rebellion were dropped.
    19. Wagner mutineers would not be prosecuted if they agreed to either sign contracts with the Defense Ministry or move to Belarus.