San Diego Union-Tribune

RUSSIA DENIES ROLE IN PRIGOZHIN’S DEATH

Kremlin dismisses speculatio­n as example of anti-Putin propaganda

- BY PAUL SONNE, VALERIYA SAFRONOVA & CASSANDRA VINOGRAD

The Kremlin on Friday heatedly denied blame for the presumed death of mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, dismissing the idea that the Russian government had destroyed a business jet reportedly carrying Prigozhin as Western propaganda aimed at smearing President Vladimir Putin.

“An absolute lie,” said Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokespers­on.

The denials were repeated in various forms throughout the day by Russia’s foreign minister, state-controlled broadcaste­rs and Putin’s closest foreign ally, Alexander Lukashenko, president of Belarus.

Some European leaders, many Western news outlets and people close to Prigozhin’s Wagner paramilita­ry force have speculated that Putin had Prigozhin killed in retaliatio­n for his brief mutiny against Russia’s military leadership in June. U.S. officials so far have been more cautious about assigning blame, but President Joe Biden said Thursday: “There’s not much that happens in Russia that Putin’s not behind. But I don’t know enough to know the answer.”

Speaking to reporters Friday, Peskov rejected suggestion­s about the cause of the plane crash, on Wednesday northwest of Moscow, as mere Western speculatio­n. But in the two months after the Wagner rebellion, many Russians as well as people abroad expressed surprise that Prigozhin was alive and free.

The Russian government has not confirmed the identities of those killed Wednesday, but it has said that Prigozhin and Wagner’s top field commander, Dmitry Utkin, were among the 10 people listed on the jet’s manifest; that 10

bodies were recovered; and that there were no survivors. Putin spoke of Prigozhin in the past tense Thursday, saying, “This was a person with a complicate­d fate.”

U.S. and other Western officials have voiced growing confidence that Prigozhin is dead and have said there is evidence that an explosion on the plane caused it to fall from the sky and crash northwest of Moscow.

Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, like Peskov, on Friday advised waiting for the results of Russia’s official inquiry into the incident. Investigat­ors said that they were analyzing the victims’ DNA for identifica­tion and that they had recovered the plane’s flight data recorders.

“I would suggest focusing on the facts and not what is being said by the Western media,” Lavrov told Russian state media.

Lukashenko, who relies heavily on political and economic support from his Russian counterpar­t, said, “Knowing Putin, how scrupulous, cautious, accurate he is, I do not believe that he would do this,” according to Belarusian state news agency Belta.

But Lukashenko, who acted as an intermedia­ry to end the June mutiny, said at the time that in their conversati­ons, Putin had raised the possibilit­y of having the mercenary boss killed. He said he had warned Prigozhin that the Russian leader intended to “squash him like a bug.”

On Russian state television, cheerleade­rs for Putin and his war against Ukraine have devoted less attention to the cause of the plane crash than to Western media reports about it. Vladimir Solovyov, a leading talk show host, suggested that Western countries were involved in the death of Prigozhin, “one way or another.”

As he spoke, images of the front pages of British tabloids flashed on the screen behind him, with headlines accusing Putin. Western media and their “agents,” Solovyov said, are “pushing an agenda that’s convenient for the West.”

Western media outlets, wrote Sergei Markov, a former Kremlin adviser, “cannot rationally explain why Putin should remove Prigozhin, who by this point posed no political threat. That’s why they explain this as Putin’s irrational hatred of any enemies.”

In fact, many Western analysts have said that in an autocratic system ruled by fear and force, Putin looked weaker for not severely punishing Prigozhin. Putin himself has said that the one transgress­ion he could not forgive was betrayal.

The Kremlin has denied links to assassinat­ions and attempted assassinat­ions of several other Putin enemies that Western government­s have concluded were the work of Russian intelligen­ce agencies.

Russian media have trumpeted those denials — sometimes with pointed remarks about the misfortune that can befall “traitors” — while floating an array of theories about others being responsibl­e.

In 2014, when Russian troops infiltrate­d and then seized the Ukrainian region of Crimea, Putin and his proxies at first insisted that Russian forces were not there and then admitted it.

Shortly after, pro-Moscow forces seized control of parts of the eastern Donbas region, starting a civil war; the Kremlin said they were just local separatist­s and denied any connection, but evidence soon emerged that Russia was instigatin­g, arming and, to some extent, carrying out the rebellion.

For years the government denied the existence of the Wagner group, and Prigozhin denied any ties to it, before both reversed their stories. They also denied a Russian disinforma­tion campaign to influence U.S. elections, until Prigozhin admitted to that, too.

And as Putin built up Russian forces on Ukraine’s border in 2021 and early 2022, he and others insisted there was no plan to go to war. Then he invaded, accused Ukraine of being the aggressor and claimed that the government in Kyiv — headed by a democratic­ally elected, Jewish president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy — was run by Nazis.

In justifying the war, prominent Russians have made baseless claims about genocide against ethnic Russians, and about U.S. missiles and bioweapons labs on Ukrainian soil, while denying the targeting of Ukrainian civilians.

Wagner, known for its brutality and effectiven­ess, had helped prop up Kremlin-aligned authoritar­ian government­s in Syria, the Central African Republic and Mali, and then spearheade­d Russia’s long, ultimately successful battle to capture the city of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine.

But for months, Prigozhin complained to his large social media following that the Ministry of Defense and the military establishm­ent were corrupt, inept and treacherou­sly undercutti­ng the war effort. He said the military leaders, jealous of his prominence and Wagner’s success, had withheld needed gear from the mercenary force.

Then came the government’s move to absorb mercenary forces into the Ministry of Defense, eliminatin­g what independen­ce Wagner had. Prigozhin protested, but Putin sided with the ministry.

The warlord stepped up his public complaints, unwilling to accept that he had lost the political power struggle, and edged dangerousl­y close to criticizin­g Putin. He even publicly rebutted the president’s rationale for war — which Russia has treated in other cases as a criminal offense — saying that Ukraine had posed no threat and was not controlled by fascists.

With time running out for Wagner fighters to either disband or sign on with the military, Prigozhin in late June mounted his mutiny, which he said was intended to topple the military leadership, not Putin.

Putin on Friday signed a decree requiring paramilita­ry fighters to swear an oath of loyalty to the nation, a step toward bringing them under Kremlin control.

To resolve the uprising two months ago without open warfare, Lukashenko offered to let Prigozhin and his fighters relocate to Belarus. Some of them apparently did go there, but Prigozhin was repeatedly seen in St. Petersburg, in Moscow and in Africa.

Lukashenko said Friday that he was not responsibl­e for guaranteei­ng the Wagner leader’s security.

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