Wagner Chief to Leave Russia in Deal to Ease Crisis

The chief of the rebel Wagner mercenary force will leave Russia and won’t face charges after calling off his troops’ advance on Saturday,  Moscow said, easing Russia’s most serious security crisis in decades. The feud between Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin and Russia’s military brass came to a violent head in the past day, with his forces capturing a key army…

World Watches With Concern as Mutiny Unfolds in Russia

Countries around the world were on Saturday closely watching events unfolding in Russia, where a mutiny by the Wagner mercenary group posed the most serious challenge yet to President Vladimir Putin’s long rule. Here is what governments and analysts are saying about the extraordinary situation taking place in nuclear-armed Russia: Ukraine Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky…

Putin Speaks to Allies in Belarus, Central Asia Amid Wagner Revolt

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday spoke to his Belarus ally, President Alexander Lukashenko, in his first international phone call since a mutiny by Wagner mercenaries inside Russia began. “The president of Russia called the president of Belarus this morning, there was a phone conversation,” Belarusian state media reported. “Vladimir Putin informed his Belarusian colleague…

How Are Officials, Pro-War Bloggers Reacting to Prigozhin’s Threat Against Russian Defense Ministry?

Russia’s FSB security service on Friday charged the Wagner mercenary group’s leader Yevgeny Prigozhin with calls to stage “an armed mutiny” after he pledged to resist Moscow’s military leadership. Prigozhin earlier accused Russia of killing a “huge number” of Wagner’s forces in strikes and vowed to retaliate, bringing tensions between Moscow’s conventional military and the…