Yevgeny
Prigozhin didn’t fall out of a window; he fell out of the sky. In a terrifying nosedive, from 28,000
feet. I hope he had just enough time left
to know who ordered it. And just for
shuffles and grins, they took out Dmitri Utkin too, the guy who gave Wagner its
name, after his callsign. Few people,
inside
Putin
eulogized his onetime best bud as “a man of difficult fate,” which is an
interesting locution. If a literal
translation, we might put a different construction on it, someone who sailed
under a troubled star. They went back a
ways together, to
Wagner
Group certainly had its uses. Murder for
hire in
What
seems to be happening now is that they’re being brought under discipline, specifically the central military
intelligence chain of command. There’s of
course a lot of intentional confusion about Progizhin’s death and who authorized
it, but reliable indicators suggest the job was assigned to Gen. Andrei Averyanov’s
special purpose unit inside GRU. This is
the crew that went after defector Sergei Skripal in the
On a different front, in what we can consider the Russian asymmetrical war effort, Prigozhin was also the founding partner of the Internet Research Agency, the Leningrad troll farm best known in the U.S. for social media influence operations to promote Trump for president. IRA is supposedly being dismantled in the wake of the Prigozhin mutiny, but we can be sure its assets will be repurposed.
In other words, although the Wagner coup attempt was widely heralded by Kremlin-watchers as seismic, an exposure of Putin’s fatal weaknesses, it seems more like a fart in the bathtub. Nothing much has really changed. “Death is our business,” Wagner’s recruiting pitch went, “and business is good.” Is it ever.
Putin’s
murderous war in