Tag: Russian armed forces

  • Leading Russian in connections to Wagner, Prigozhin, mysteriously vanishes

    Leading Russian in connections to Wagner, Prigozhin, mysteriously vanishes

    A senior Russian general is said to have “disappeared” amid allegations that he was aware of Yevgeny Prigozhin of the Wagner Group’s armed uprising before it became a danger to Vladimir Putin’s government.

    One idea holds that General Sergei “Armageddon” Surovikin is being questioned in connection with a conspiracy to overthrow Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu in an effort to eliminate internal adversaries.

    The second-in-command of the Russian armed forces is Surovikin, 56.

    He is connected to ‘coup leader’ Prigozhin, the commander of the Wagner mercenary army.

    The top Russian military commander in Ukraine, Gen. Sergei Surovikin, left, and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, center, attend a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin during his visit to the joint staff of troops involved in Russia's military operation in Ukraine,.
    Surovikin, nicknamed ‘General Armageddon’, has not been seen since Prigozhin’s failed coup of the Russian military leadership (Picture: AP)

    ‌US officials briefed on American intelligence said a top Russian general had advance knowledge of Prigozhin’s plans to rebel against Shoigu and chief of the armed forces General Valery Gerasimov over failings in the war against Ukraine, reported The New York Times.‌

    The suspicion is that this general is Surovikin, a commander known for his ruthlessness and brutality.‌

    Now well-connected pro-war Rybar Telegram channel has revealed that Surovikin ‘has not been seen since Saturday’.‌

    The military-linked channel stated: ‘The whereabouts of “General Armageddon” is not known for certain.‌

    ‘There is a version that he is under interrogation.’‌

    The channel said that while Gerasimov formally retains his title he is ‘no longer involved in decisions of issues in the [war].’‌

    In command of the special military operation now is Airborne Forces Commander Mikhail Teplinsky, said Rybar.‌

    General Sergei Surovikin
    The General is rumoured to be under interrogation over rumours he hd advance knowledge of the Wagner plot (Picture: East2west News)

    Surovikin was put in charge of the Russian war effort in October only to be stripped of responsibility by Putin in January- yet he remained as Gerasimov’s deputy.

    Before evidently disappearing Surovikin issued a desperate Saturday call to give up their opposition to the military leadership and return to their bases ‘before it is too late’.‌

    He revealed he had been ordered back to Moscow from the frontline.

    It now appears this may have been because of suspicions of his knowledge of the “coup” as suspected sympathy for it.‌

    He said publicly at the time: ‘We cannot play into the enemy’s hands during this hard time for our country.‌

    ‘Before it is not too late, it is necessary to obey the order of the popularly-elected president of the Russian Federation.’‌

    It is alleged he has not been seen since recording this message.

    Yevgeny Prigozhin, the owner of the Wagner Group military company, records his video addresses in Rostov-on-Don, Russia.
    Wagner leader Prigozhin has since been exiled to Belarus following his aborted coup attempt (Picture: AP)

    Rybar stated: ‘The armed mutiny of the Wagner PMC [private military company] has become a pretext for large-scale purges in the ranks of the Russian Armed Forces and a crash test of the ministry’s loyalty.

    ‌Junior ranks are also being purged of those who showed support for Wagner’s uprising against Putin’s commanders, it is claimed.

    ‌Meanwhile, a separate report said Putin was too scared to fire his ‘extremely dangerous’ defence minister, fearing him as a direct rival.

    ‌The weakened dictator eventually halted the armed revolt at the weekend which specifically targeted Shoigu for his failings in the war.‌

    But VChK-OGPU Telegram channel cited an insider source saying Putin could not agree to revolt leader Prigozhin’s demand to fire the 68-year-old defence minister because of Shoigu’s popularity with senior officials.

    ‘Shoigu is extremely dangerous in the event of resignation, due to his knowledge, the huge number of people loyal to him in leadership positions, and the presence of levers of influence … in the Kremlin,’ said the channel’s source.‌

    Shoigu has served longer in the Russian government than Putin, and knows where bodies are buried.

    He is not like other Putin ministers ‘whose silence and inaction can be bought with money’, said the source.‌

    ‘Everything is more serious here. Putin is not ready for such a conflict now.’

    When negotiations involving Belarus dictator Alexander Lukashenko and FSB chief Alexander Bortnikov were underway on Saturday to halt the armed revolt, Putin bluntly refused to oust Shoigu.

    In the event a deal was hatched to allow Prigozhin to go unpunished into exile even though Putin had declared the Wagner boss was guilty of ‘treason’ and ‘betrayal’.

  • Government to formally designate Russia’s Wagner Group as terrorist group

    Government to formally designate Russia’s Wagner Group as terrorist group

    It is known that the UK plans to list the Russian mercenary Wagner Group as a terrorist organization.

    After spending two months assembling a legal defense, a government source claimed the action was “imminent” and would likely be implemented within weeks, according to The Times.

    With proscription, it would be illegal to support Wagner, urge others to do so, display its logo in public, or go to its meetings.

    Among other organisations on the Government’s proscribed list are the Islamic State, al-Qaida and neo-Nazi group National Action.

    It comes as Labour demanded ministers formally label the Wagner Group a terror outfit after accusing it of committing ‘appalling atrocities’.

    The Wagner Group, led by warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin and made up of contractors and recruited convicts, has been fighting alongside Russian armed forces in areas of eastern Ukraine.

    It has been heavily involved in the city of Bakhmut, where the longest – and likely bloodiest – battle of the war has taken place.

    Earlier on Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin used Moscow’s Victory Day parade to accuse the West of unleashing a ‘real war’ on the country with its ‘untamed ambitions’.

    Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said that international allies must continue supporting Ukraine in order to uphold the principle that ‘powerful nations cannot invade their neighbours with impunity’.

    Speaking on a visit to the US, Mr Cleverly said: ‘Things are complicated, things are messy, things are difficult, things will get scary.

    ‘We will expect to hear escalatory words coming out of Vladimir Putin’s lips – we need to be ready for that, we need to have the resolve to continue to do the right thing, notwithstanding those comments.’

    Labour said in February it wanted ministers to follow the US’s lead after Washington designated Wagner a ‘significant transnational criminal organisation’.

    In a joint statement, shadow foreign secretary David Lammy and shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said: ‘The Wagner Group is responsible for the appalling atrocities in Ukraine and across the world.

    ‘No-one in the UK should be allowed to belong to the Wagner Group, support it or promote it.’

    The push for Wagner to be proscribed came after a Government department reportedly helped its millionaire owner Mr Prigozhin to circumvent UK sanctions to take a British journalist to court in 2021.

    The Treasury commissioned an internal review of its processes after it was reported that licences had been issued to allow lawyers to help Mr Prigozhin launch legal action against a Bellingcat reporter in the UK while the Russian oligarch was subject to sanctions.

    As a result of the review, the department said the Government was committed to ‘further targeted changes to the process for issuing legal fees licences that safeguard the sanctions regime against the risk of manipulation and ensure ministers are accountable for OFSI Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation) decision-making’.