New York Post

RUSSIAN GENERAL BUSTED

Wagner ally suspect

- By LEE BROWN With Wires leebrown@nypost.com

The top Russian military leader who is believed to have known in advance about the weekend’s mutiny has been arrested — and security services have him “by the balls,” according to a local report.

The Kremlin on Thursday again refused to discuss the whereabout­s of Gen. Sergei Surovikin, 56, who has not been seen since the weekend revolt by his close ally, Wagner Group leader Yevgeny Prigozhin.

However, two sources close to Russia’s Defense Ministry confirmed to the Moscow Times that the one-time military leader of the Ukraine war has been arrested, with one saying his situation is “not OK.”

“Apparently, he [Surovikin] chose Prigozhin’s side during the uprising, and they’ve gotten him by the balls,” one of the sources said.

The interrogat­ion of the general — who remained a deputy commander of Russian forces in Ukraine — is so sensitive that Defense Ministry officials “are not even commenting on this informatio­n through our internal channels,” one of the sources told the Moscow paper.

Veteran Russian journalist Alexei Venediktov said that Surovikin “has not been in touch with his family for three days,” according to the Financial Times. “His security guards do not answer either.”

Sergei Markov, a pro-Kremlin political consultant and former politician, also stated on Telegram that the brutal leader dubbed “General Armageddon” was being interrogat­ed.

“And not only him . . . . A massive investigat­ion has begun,” he wrote.

“Hundreds of investigat­ors are certainly involved in it and thousands of people will be interrogat­ed. Or maybe tens of thousands.

“Absolutely all generals and officers who had contact with Prigozhin and Wagner will be interrogat­ed. And everyone who served in Wagner,” she said.

It is being “conducted by the FSB [Federal Security Service], the Investigat­ive Committee and the Military Prosecutor’s Office,” he said.

“The main task of the investigat­ion is still not to identify who should be punished, but to identify what systemic mistakes were made” to help prevent a future “revolt,” he wrote.

“Surovikin must have been interrogat­ed for many hours for many days. Not because he’s the prime suspect, but because he’s the prime informant” as Wagner’s key handler, Markov stated.

The arrest was part of warmongeri­ng President Vladimir Putin’s efforts to start “now cleaning house” after the mutiny he admitted came close to a “civil war,” one Western government official told the FT.

Even the EU’s chief diplomat, Josep Borrell, told the bloc’s summit on Thursday that “some generals have been arrested,” the FT report noted.

“So I suppose that Putin will be in a cleaning mode, internally. And a more assertive mood, Borrell said.

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