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A ROAD TO RUIN? 24 HOURS THAT SHOOK A NATION
The Guardian Weekly
|June 30, 2023
The fury of one of Vladimir Putin's once-trusted lieutenants has exposed serious fault lines inside the Kremlin. Can the president's regime survive?
Yevgeny Prigozhin let rip on his favourite subject: the incompetence and vanity of Russia's defence minister, Sergei Shoigu. Seated in front of a Wagner flag and sipping from a mug of tea last Thursday, he called his bitter enemy a scumbag, a craven PR man and oligarch who had never held a weapon in his life.
The defence ministry had duped Vladimir Putin into last year's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Prigozhin added. The decision had nothing to do with "denazification" or "demilitarisation", or an imminent Nato attack on Russia - the official reasons for the war; it was all about Shoigu's wish for a second "hero of Russia" medal.
So far, so normal. Prigozhin's online rants against Russia's military leaders had been going on for months. He had accused Shoigu and Valery Gerasimov, the commander-in-chief, of depriving his Wagner troops of ammunition, of sacrificing Russian soldiers in disastrous missions and of seizing eastern Ukraine in order to plunder it.
The feud escalated dramatically on 10 June, when Shoigu announced that Wagner soldiers would have to sign contracts with his ministry. In effect, Wagner would cease to exist. Putin seemingly endorsed the proposal.
Prigozhin, once Putin's trusted ally, was at a personal crossroads. He might accept the Kremlin's decision. Or he could fight back.
The answer came last Friday evening when he posted another provocative video on his Telegram channel. It showed the apparent aftermath of a missile strike on a leafy Wagner camp somewhere in occupied Donbas. A breathless soldier jogged past shredded trees and what looked like a body. "Fuck! Oh fuck!," he said.
This story is from the June 30, 2023 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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