From Moscow Times:
“Prigozhin’s Armed Rebellion Will Have Lasting Consequences
for Russia, Putin and the Ukraine War”
Vladimir Putin has ruled Russia with an increasingly tighter
grip on power for more than two decades. But his decision to invade Ukraine in
February 2022 set a series of events into motion that have had unimaginable
consequences for Russia and its president. One of those consequences is playing
out right now: An armed rebellion by the Wagner PMC, led by its leader Yevgeny
Prigozhin, against the Russian military.
Prigozhin’s rebellion — or insurrection — is a watershed
moment for Russia and Putin. It is an unprecedented challenge to Putin’s rule
and, of far greater consequence, to Putinism — Putin’s personal system of
semi-totalitarian state control. The repercussions of recent days’ events will
reverberate throughout Russia for months and years to come, regardless of their
outcome.
It is highly unlikely that Prigozhin and his Wagner soldiers
have the capacity, following, manpower, or military equipment to effectively
overthrow the Russian army. But in any case, the current threat that Prigozhin
poses to Putin’s system is in the images of tanks rolling through the southern
Russian city of Rostov and uncountable queries of “chto proiskhodit?” (what’s
going on?) flooding Russian-language social media. Up until now, Russia’s
enemies were in the West. Now the biggest threat to Russia and Putin is coming
from Russians from within. The narrative justifying Russia’s war against
Ukraine is coming apart at the seams.
No one knows how far Prigozhin will go, how much force he is
prepared to use, and to what extent he is a rational actor. But a heavy-handed
government response, violent and bloody, could benefit Prigozhin. Wagner has
little chance of strategic success, but the group has already made massive
tactical gains in publicity and public perception.
Regardless of the outcome of the rebellion, the Kremlin will
have no choice but to concede that it lost control of the situation. As tanks
are rolling through the streets of Russia, cities are under lockdown, and Putin
is addressing the nation about an attempted coup, it must not be forgotten that
up until now, the Kremlin’s stance was that everything was under control. After
today, they no longer maintain that plausible deniability. That is a public
relations disaster for the Kremlin, and it threatens both national stability
and the war effort.
It will also affect public opinion. Despite evidence of
Russian military failures, many Russians have refused to acknowledge that the
war was a mistake and that the army was out-fought. The majority of Russians
have either blindly supported the actions of their government or closed their
eyes to the uncomfortable realities generated by the army’s poor performance in
the war — not to mention sanctions, mobilization, inflation, and mass
emigration. Russia’s far-right bloggers, who have millions of followers on
social media and have lamented for months the hesitancy of the Kremlin to
escalate the war and criticized the slow speed of military gains, will only
intensify criticism and lead more of the public to question the Russian
authorities.
Finally, and possibly most importantly, Prigozhin’s rebellion
is not simply an attack on the Russian army, but an attack on Putin himself –
the ultimate offense that anyone can commit in Russia. Putin, in his speech to
the nation on June 24 to address the situation, called it a “betrayal” and
“treason.” These could not have been easy words for Putin to speak publicly, as
they are a tacit admission of his personal failure.
In past months, Putin has tried to remain distant from the
army’s failures, Ukrainian drone attacks inside of Russia’s borders, and
incursions into the Belgorod region, largely shifting the blame on the
military. But a rebellion in Russian streets goes beyond military failures in
Russia’s war against Ukraine. It is an attack on the entire system over which
Putin personally rules. Criticizing the war has become everyday business for
Prigozhin, but bringing tanks out into the street and setting a course for Moscow
shows that Putin is no longer in full control. Even if Prigozhin’s rebellion is
quickly put down, it will be too late. For Putin and his system, the damage is
already done.
^ This sums everything up nicely. ^
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