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What Didn't Happen in Russia
There was no uprising and Prigozhin couldn't deliver what he promised
Everyone is talking about what happened in Russia, but almost no one is talking about what didn't happen in Russia.
Yevgeny Prigozhin, the cofounder of the Wagner group along with Dmitry Utkin, mustered about 8,000 men and entered Russian territory on what he called a March for Justice. He was heading for Moscow. Just as he was able to occupy the local Ministry of Defense headquarters in Rostov-on-Don, Prigozhin's aim apparently was to take over the Russian defense ministry in Moscow. He demanded the immediate resignations of the current defense minister, Sergei Shoigu, and the Chief of the General Staff of Russia's armed forces, Valery Gerasimov.
As is well known, his forces didn't make it there. A convoy of a few thousand Wagnerites, under the command of Utkin, stopped some 120 km from Moscow. Prigozhin himself stayed in Rostov-on-Don at the Defense Headquarters, first trying to call Vladimir Putin, who refused to talk to him, and then to lower rank officials. Finding himself without support, with his small force facing annihilation, and his family threatened, Prigozhin sought an intermediary and found one in Putin ally, Alexander Lukashenko, the President of Belarus. With Putin hovering in the background, a deal was struck. Prigozhin and the 8,000 men he brought with him, would be going into exile in Belarus. Treason charges were dropped. The remaining Wagner troops, somewhere around 12,000 were offered contracts with the Russian army, or they could go home. Many of them, according to reports, are taking the deal and signing up.
To launch his operation, Prigozhin took a number of steps over a period of the past six or more months. Among these were constant, and provably false, accusations that he was not getting enough ammunition to fight in Bakhmut. Along with that, Prigozhin charged that the army leadership was corrupt, that they refused to defend his flanks during the Bakhmut operation, and that they were losing massively in the Ukraine war. None of these accusations were true.
In the past few weeks the Russian army leadership demanded that Wagner be brought under their control and they required each and every one of them, Prigozhin most of all, to sign a contract with the Russian command putting them under Russian army orders. Prigozhin refused.
Prigozhin then fabricated a couple of incidents, claiming that his forces were attacked from the rear by the Russian army. He published two fake videos that made the rounds of social media, along with a one-man diatribe against the rotten army leadership.
It turns out, however, there was more to it than that. Sources report that Prigozhin had been in touch with Ukrainian military intelligence (known as the HUR MO), at least since last January. Some sources say that he also flew to Africa, where Wagner forces are operational, to hold a meeting with Ukrainian intelligence officials.
Similarly there are reports that he also was talking to a number of special force units inside Russia, asking them to join him.
People forget that the Wagner Group is a product of Russian military intelligence, the GRU. While Prigozhin himself has no military background, his co-founded, Dmitry Utkin was a GRU Spetsnaz special operator.
Spetsnaz units have been around at least since 1949, perhaps before. They carry out clandestine operations, usually behind enemy lines. They are armed with the latest gear and have been suspected of being capable of planting small nuclear weapons in the backyards of Russia's enemies.
A number of spetsnaz units including some from the FSB (the successor to the KGB) have been identified on the Internet as pro-Prigozhin, meaning that there could have been a power struggle in the Army, perhaps also in the FSB, and possibly aimed not only at replacing the current military leadership, but really aimed at humiliating and replacing Putin.
It is probably information like this that Prigozhin may have conveyed to his Ukrainian intelligence interlocutors. It is also said, again without hard proof, that Prigozhin also promised the Ukrainians he would reveal to them where Russia's main command elements were located, aiming to use Ukraine to destroy them.
While it isn't possible to confirm any of this, it seems to be the case that Prigozhin was hoping for a general uprising, so that his March for Justice would be filled out by thousands of highly placed supporters, including the police, army and intelligence.
We now know there was no uprising and no one offered to join Prigozhin on his furtive quest. Indeed, even the real operational commander of the Wagner forces, though officially an advisor, and the Deputy head of Russia's special military operation in Ukraine, Sergei Surovikin, who was threatened by Prigozhin, refused to go along with him and published a video where he told Wagner forces not to go into Russia or fight Russians. In the video, Surovikin is sitting with an automatic machine pistol clutched in his right hand.
The lack of support does not mean that Prigozhin was poorly regarded by Russians. In fact, Prigozhin was cheered in Rostov-on-Don, perhaps because he is seen as the Hero of Bakhmut.
But there are things about Prigozhin that are starting to leak out that will tarnish his popular image. To begin with, he said there was no bloodshed in his March for Justice, a blatant lie. Thirty seven pilots and crews of Russian helicopters and one transport aircraft that were shot down by the Wagnerites, is evidence there was killing.
Nor is Prigozhin free from corruption. He had sweetheart deals with the Russian army where Prigozhin's companies provided supplies at inflated prices. Those contracts were cancelled a week or so before Prigozhin initiated his crossing into Russian territory.
But the real problem are the contacts Prigozhin had with Ukraine's secret intelligence services, his alleged offers to sell out Russian command centers, and his bargaining for support, not so much from Ukraine, but from the United States. It should surprise no one that the CIA was fully informed by their Ukrainian counterparts, who are desperate to see Russia's leaders overturned and NATO to come to their rescue.
Prigozhin offered a very good deal. In exchange for outside support he would take over Russia, reorient to the West, and leave Ukraine. The offer, at a critical moment when the Ukrainian offensive is faltering, was an offer hard to refuse.
Putin has a major challenge now to deal with the dissidents in his regime who oppose him. While none of them came forward overtly, it appears likely the FSB and Putin know who Prigozhin was talking to. They will have to judge whether these individuals and organizations are reliable, or if they will have to be dealt with by Russian security.
Putin also has to crack down on the widespread sabotage in Russian cities. Not all this can be blamed on Ukrainians. Many of the perpetrators are Russians, and from the looks of it, they are professional, again pointing a finger at those in a position to carry out such attacks. Beyond sabotage, there have been a number of assassinations of prominent pro-Putin leaders. Putin must realize by now that he also is on the list and that the support for these attacks is mostly from internal sources.
The night of the long knives may happen soon if Putin is to survive as Russia's leader.
It isn't clear what will happen to Prigozhin and to his collaborator Utkin. While the Wagner force remains a potent and useful tool for Russia, its current leaders are a major liability.
What didn’t happen in Russia was a general uprising and an open fracturing of the security apparat. But what didn’t happen may yet happen, unless Putin can act decisively. No one can say if he can, or if he will.
https://simplicius76.substack.com/p/prigozhins-siege-ends-postmortem
Thank you for the clarification as to the "uprising" that the legacy media has been drooling over for the past couple of days - I immediately tossed their "uprising" report onto the fiction pile where it now sits alongside "Putin at death's door won't live past June 2022"; "Ghost of Kiev" and the "Ukraine Island Defenders". Probably the closest to the truth I've read before your article has been the Babylon Bee's report of "Russian Mercenaries Steal Putin's Podium In Brazen Coup Attempt".