Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine hails gains in Bakhmut as Zelenskiy wins more weapons in Europe – Reuters.com

KYIV/LONDON, May 15 (Reuters) - Ukraine on Monday hailed its first substantial battlefield advances in six months as President Volodymyr Zelenskiy won pledges for new long-range drones in Britain to add to a haul of Western arms for a counteroffensive against Russian invaders.

Since last week, the Ukrainian military has started to push Russian forces back in and around the embattled city of Bakhmut, its first significant offensive operations since its troops recaptured the southern city of Kherson in November.

"The advance of our troops along the Bakhmut direction is the first success of offensive actions in the defence of Bakhmut," Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskyi, Commander of Ground Forces, said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.

"The last few days have shown that we can move forward and destroy the enemy even in such extremely difficult conditions," he said. "We are fighting with fewer resources than the enemy. At the same time, we are able to ruin its plans."

In its evening battlefield update on Monday, Ukraine's army General Staff said Russian forces were pressing efforts backed by heavy shelling to gain ground but had failed to advance around the village of Ivanivske on the city's western fringes.

The battle for Bakhmut has become the longest and bloodiest of the war and has totemic significance for Russia, which has no other prizes to show for a winter campaign that cost thousands of lives.

Over the past half year, Kyiv has dug in on the defensive while Moscow mounted its campaign, sending hundreds of thousands of fresh reservists and mercenaries into Europe's bloodiest ground combat since World War Two.

Kyiv is now preparing a counteroffensive using hundreds of new tanks and armored vehicles sent by Western countries since the start of 2023, aiming to recapture the sixth of Ukraine's territory Moscow claims to have annexed.

Zelenskiy met British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in London on Monday, the latest stop in a tour that brought him to Rome, Berlin and Paris over the past three days, pocketing major new pledges of weapons along the way.

Britain, which last week became the first Western country to offer Ukraine long-range cruise missiles, followed that up during Zelenskiy's visit by promising drones that could strike at a range of 200 km (125 miles).

Sunak's government said it would soon start training Ukrainian pilots to fly fighter jets. French President Emmanuel Macron said in an interview with France's TF1 television that France was open to training Ukrainian pilots but he and Zelenskiy had not discussed delivering warplanes.

"I have not talked about airplanes. I have talked about missiles. I have talked about training," Macron said.

Zelenskiy described the new weapons pledged by the Europeans as "important and powerful."

In a video address from a train taking him back to Kyiv, he said, "We are returning home with new military help. Newer and more powerful weapons for the front, more protection for our people. Greater political support..."

Sunak said the war was at a "pivotal moment" and Britain would remain steadfast. "It is important for the Kremlin to also know that we are not going away. We are here for the long term."

The Kremlin said it did not believe the added hardware would change the course of what it calls a "special military operation" to eliminate security threats posed by Kyiv's pursuit of ties with the West. Kyiv and Western backers call Russia's actions an unprovoked land grab.

Ukrainian forces drove Russian troops back from Kyiv a year ago, and recaptured ground in the second half of 2022, but have since endured a punishing Russian assault while waiting for arms to arrive.

Ukrainian officials are generally mum about details of offensives that are under way, but have reported substantial territorial gains on both the northern and southern outskirts of Bakhmut over the past week.

Moscow has acknowledged retreating north of the city, and the head of the Wagner private army fighting inside Bakhmut has said Russia's regular forces have fled positions on the northern and southern flanks.

Ukrainian officials portray the fighting in that area as localized advances, not the major counteroffensive yet to get under way.

A respected Russian news outlet's report on Saturday that four Russian military aircraft were shot down near the borders of Belarus and Ukraine was inadvertently confirmed by Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko on Monday.

"Three days after the events near us - I mean in the Bryansk region, when four aircraft were shot down, we are forced to respond. Since then, we, our troops, have been on high alert," Lukashenko was quoted as saying at an air force command base, according to the Pul Pervovo Telegram channel, a state outlet that reports on Lukashenko's activities.

There was no official response from Ukraine. But Mykhailo Podolyak, a senior adviser to Zelenskiy, on Saturday called the incident "justice ... and instant karma."

Belarus is a close ally of Russia, which used it as a launch pad for the invasion, though Lukashenko has insisted Belarus is not a party to the war and has not sent troops to fight alongside Russian forces.

Writing by Peter Graff; editing by Mark Heinrich

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Ukraine hails gains in Bakhmut as Zelenskiy wins more weapons in Europe - Reuters.com

Ukraine war: Russians in Germany split over Putin’s invasion – BBC

14 May 2023

Victory Day commemorations in Berlin saw many turn out in the German capital with differing views

Russian communities across Europe have been polarised by the Ukraine war - and that threatened to spill over in Berlin this month when they marked the defeat of Nazi Germany.

Given how much Vladimir Putin uses the Soviet victory over fascism in 1945 to justify Russia's ongoing full-scale invasion of Ukraine, there was no avoiding the war here in the German capital.

Many German-based Russians clearly believe the president's reasons for the war, with some views in Berlin virtually indistinguishable from the narratives promoted by Russian state TV - but others are just as vocal in opposing it.

The commemorations in Berlin started on 8 May, as Germany marked the 78th anniversary of its liberation from fascism, and groups of Russians visited the Soviet war memorial in Treptower Park.

One, Alexander, who is originally from Russia but has lived in Germany for more than 20 years, said he believed Russian forces were "defending Donbas, Crimea, Kherson, and Odesa against fascists" - listing places in south-eastern Ukraine.

Alexander shows personal items decorated with portraits of Putin, he says he believes Russia is fighting fascism in Ukraine

"They belong to Russia! Russia is taking back what belongs to it," added Anna, another Russian living in Germany.

Alexander then showed me a cigarette holder and a tobacco box he had decorated by taping portraits of President Putin to them.

But the events that matter most to Russian speakers were held the following day, 9 May - marked in Russia as Victory Day.

They kicked off with the Russian ambassador laying flowers to the imposing statue of a Soviet soldier in Treptower Park. Again, the event mostly attracted supporters of the Kremlin's policies and rhetoric.

One of them, a young Russian called Yevgenia, told me that "the collective West, particularly America" were fanning the flames of neo-Nazism in Ukraine.

Yevgenia was sporting the St George's Ribbon - a Kremlin-backed symbol often used by Russian troops fighting in Ukraine. Like many at the rally, she and her friend held aloft a Soviet flag, as Russian flags were banned.

Yevgenia (right) wears a St George's Ribbon - a Kremlin-backed symbol used by Russian troops in the Ukraine war

But not everyone supported such views.

The monument to the grieving mother at the other end of Treptower Park was the meeting point for those who wanted to honour the victims of fascism without supporting Mr Putin's claims that he is fighting "fascists" in Ukraine.

And many of the people who gathered there were Russians. One of them, Kirill, told me he fled Russia last October to avoid being drafted into the army and being sent to fight in Ukraine.

"I do not want to become a murderer for Putin. I do not believe the lies I'm told by TV," he said.

"I was very afraid, but I attended anti-war rallies. I did all I could do," Kirill told me, standing alongside a poster about political prisoners in Russia.

Kirill, with a poster of political prisoners in Russia, says he left the country to avoid being drafted into the Russian army

Kirill fled Russia after being arrested, fined and beaten for attending anti-war rallies in St Petersburg.

Another young Russian in this corner of Treptower Park, an activist called Alexandra, thought President Putin had turned Victory Day into a propaganda tool. "It is an absolute sacrilege for us," she told me.

Her friend Ekaterina chimed in: "It is important for me to show that not everyone from Russia supports what is happening in Ukraine or what this day has turned into.

"The way it is marked now is a one big reason why this war started on 24 February last year."

At another important event held by Russians in Berlin on Victory Day, dozens gathered at the Brandenburg Gate for what is known as the march of the Immortal Regiment.

Even though such marches are encouraged by the Kremlin, the one held in Berlin seemed less overly political than the events in Treptower Park, with dozens of Russians solemnly carrying photographs of their ancestors who fought in World War Two.

A group of anti-war Russians demonstrated against Victory Day being turned into a propaganda tool - but their event was outnumbered by the rally sporting Kremlin-encouraged symbols such as St George's ribbons or Soviet flags.

Kristina attends a demonstration with a sign criticising the West's supply of weapons to Ukraine

But what do Germans think of all this?

I was able to find the whole spectrum of opinions among them. Many came to Treptower Park on 8-9 May to offer thanks for the Soviet army liberating Germany from fascism, and were less concerned with the present.

"What Putin is doing in Ukraine now doesn't change the fact that [Russia did liberate Germany]," one of them, Wolfgang, told me.

Another German demonstrator, Kristina, was against weapons deliveries to what she described as the "fascist regime" in Ukraine.

But a young man, Janek, said it was "shameful" that President Putin was using the defeat of Nazism as a foreign policy tool.

"They say they want to free Ukrainians from the Nazis there - but it's just not true, it's propaganda," he said.

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Ukraine war: Russians in Germany split over Putin's invasion - BBC

Wagner boss offered up Russian positions to Kyiv: Washington Post – Al Jazeera English

US newspaper report, denied by mercenary groups leader, says locations were offered in exchange for a withdrawal near Bakhmut.

The head of Russias Wagner mercenary group offered in late January to reveal Russian military positions to Kyiv in exchange for a Ukrainian withdrawal around Bakhmut, The Washington Post reports, citing leaked Pentagon documents.

The US newspaper reported late on Sunday that Yevgeny Prigozhin, whose fighters have spearheaded the battle for the eastern Ukrainian city, made the offer via his secret communications with Ukrainian intelligence, which he has kept throughout the war.

The documents do not clarify which Russian positions Prigozhin would have given up. Two Ukrainian officials told the Post that Prigozhin had extended the offer more than once.

Still, Kyiv reportedly rejected the offer because it does not trust the Wagner Groups boss.

According to another document, Prigozhin also told Ukraine that the Russian military was struggling with ammunition and advised them to push towards the border of Crimea.

But on Monday, the Wagner founder took to the Telegram messaging app to deny that he had offered Kyiv Russian positions in Bakhmut.

The Kremlin said The Washington Post report sounds like a hoax.

During the fight for Bakhmut, the longest and bloodiest battle of the Ukraine war, Prigozhin has repeatedly blasted Russian military commanders, complaining that Moscow is not sending enough arms to his fighters to take the city.

Last week, the Wagner boss threatened to pull his forces out if more weapons were not sent to the front line but later said he was told they would be regarded as traitors if they left.

Other leaked US documents have revealed that the Russian Ministry of Defence is privately considering how to respond to Prigozhins criticism of the militarys performance during the war.

Moscow acknowledged on Friday that its forces had fallen back in Bakhmut, which Prigozhin called a rout not, as Russia said, a regrouping.

But on Sunday, Prigozhin said on Telegram that his forces were in control of 28 multistorey buildings in western Bakhmut, where Ukrainian troops are based.

Ukrainian forces, he said, held 20 buildings and an area of 1.69sq km (0.65sq miles).

While Ukraine continues preparing for its anticipated counteroffensive, Ukrainian Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskyi on Monday hailed operations in Bakhmut.

On Telegram, he said: The advance of our troops along the Bakhmut direction is the first success of offensive actions in the defence of Bakhmut.

The last few days have shown that we can move forward and destroy the enemy even in such extremely difficult conditions. We are fighting with fewer resources than the enemy. At the same time, we are able to ruin its plans.

But Deputy Defence Minister Hanna Maliar said heavy fighting continued in and around the city and everything was difficult there.

The Russians have not changed their goals. They are sending assault troops to the outskirts of Bakhmut, she wrote on Telegram.

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Wagner boss offered up Russian positions to Kyiv: Washington Post - Al Jazeera English

European leaders meet in Iceland to reaffirm values as Ukraine war rages on – Reuters.com

REYKJAVIK, May 16 (Reuters) - European leaders are meeting in Iceland on Tuesday for a two-day summit meant to show their support for Ukraine but also send a powerful message on core democratic values many feel are under threat.

In only the fourth summit of the Council of Europe (CoE) since it was founded after World War Two, the 46 members of the leading human rights body, which is entirely separate from the European Union, will gather to discuss emerging threats as the war in Ukraine rages on.

"The Council of Europe is often underestimated in its importance," Frank Schwabe, a German lawmaker who was closely involved in the planning of the summit told Reuters.

The CoE's democratic values are upheld by the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights, where citizens can take governments to court in case of human rights violations.

Russia's membership was suspended the day after it invaded Ukraine in February 2022. Moscow then left the watchdog hours before a vote to expel it.

According to a draft of the final declaration seen by Reuters, the leaders will approve a new Register of Damages, a mechanism to record and document evidence and claims of damage, loss or injury incurred as a result of the Russian invasion.

"The summit will also be about saying what happens if you don't respect the rules," Schwabe said. "The threat of expulsion is already a sharp sword. Even Russia didn't want to leave the Council of Europe, Turkey doesn't want to leave either."

Turkey, which is in the middle of a presidential election fought by President Tayyip Erdogan, faces removal from the CoE after it failed to implement a 2019 court ruling to release jailed businessman and philanthropist Osman Kavala.

The CoE's Committee of Ministers has launched infringement proceedings against Ankara that have so far stressed dialogue but could eventually see Turkey's removal or its membership suspended, experts say.

European leaders such as Germany's Olaf Scholz, Britain's Rishi Sunak and French President Emmanuel Macron will attend the summit in Reykjavik, while Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskiy will address his counterparts via videolink.

Icelandic organisers said the meeting will be an opportunity to support Ukraine through "concrete measures" as well as to boost initiatives to address emerging threats to democracy, including from climate change and artificial intelligence.

Macron's office said the Council is looking at how its little-known bank, the Council of Europe Development Bank (CEB), could help meet the needs of struggling Ukrainians.

Meanwhile, Sunak will use the meeting to urge other leaders to stop "the humanitarian disaster caused by illegal immigration," his office said.

The British prime minister will make the case for reforming the European Court of Human Rights' power to block British migrant deportation flights to Rwanda, Number 10 said in pre-released remarks.

Sunak will call for a reform of the court's Rule 39, which was used to issue last-minute injunctions to ground the flights of migrants to the East African country, plans that have been critised by opponents, charities, and religious leaders as inhumane.

Additional reporting by Andrew MacAskill in London;Writing by Michel Rose; Editing by Christina Fincher

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European leaders meet in Iceland to reaffirm values as Ukraine war rages on - Reuters.com

Prigozhin is waging war on Ukraine and Putin. Who will kill him first? – Daily Mail

The shaven-headed man spits obscenities into the camera. Thrusting his head forward and glaring at the viewer, he unleashes a volley of abuse at Russian Chief of Staff Valery Gerasimov and Minister of Defence Sergey Shoigu. The man is Yevgeny Prigozhin, head of brutal Russian mercenary outfit the Wagner Group and he is desperate.

Prigozhin is at war on two fronts. On the ground, his forces are dying in ever greater numbers on the frontline in the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut. On video and in print, he is taking on the Russian elites he so despises.

And last week he escalated his campaign to an unthinkable level in a new video. We have a happy Grandpa, he says, snarling into the camera. But how do you win a war, he asks sarcastically, if it turns out that this Grandpa is a complete d***head?

Yevgeny Prigozhin on Friday 5 May threatened to pull out Wagner forces from the embattled Ukrainian city of Bakhmut amid a dispute over ammunition with the regular military command

Prigozhin (L) assists then-Prime Minister Vladimir Putin during a dinner with foreign scholars and journalists at the restaurant Cheval Blanc outside Moscow on November 11, 2011

Grandpa is a name Russians often give to their president, Vladimir Putin. Prigozhin, it seems, is now turning his fire on his own modern-day tsar. It is astonishing behaviour from a man who, until recently, was seen as one of Putins most trusted lieutenants. But who exactly is he?

Yevgeny Prigozhin has been a malignant part of my life for almost a decade. I first encountered his work in 2014, after Russias invasion of Crimea, when I was reporting from a position near the occupied city of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine. Russian news reports claimed the Ukrainian army had tortured and then publicly crucified a three-year-old boy in a square in Sloviansk.

It was all lies of course. But the consequences were real enough.

The Russia-backed separatists who controlled much of the region were outraged and visited punishment on local populations in response: real atrocities in retaliation for a fake one. Ukraine was then, as now, a land blanketed in Russian lies. Scrolling through Facebook and Twitter on my phone, my feeds were full of Russian reports about the situation on the ground that I knew to be utterly false. There was so much disinformation and it was all so regimented that I knew it had to be orchestrated.

It was. As I revealed in my book War In 140 Characters: How Social Media Is Reshaping Conflict In The Twenty First Century, much of this propaganda or disinformation came from an organisation called the Internet Research Agency that ran so-called troll farms, the most notable of which was in an office block in St Petersburg where rows of laptop warriors pumped out disinformation 24/7.

It was a factory of lies and its owner was Yevgeny Prigozhin. When I asked around about him, everyone was a bit vague. As one source told me: Prigozhin is the man from nowhere, he is part of no institution or agency. Its just strange.

Prigozhins story is fascinating because it mirrors almost perfectly the story of post-Soviet Russia, and the rise of its most powerful man, Vladimir Putin.

Like Putin, Prigozhin comes from St Petersburg. He grew up a street thug and, after being convicted of robbery and involving minors in criminal activity in the 1980s, he served around nine years of a 12-year sentence.

Polina Prigozhina, 30, the daughter of Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin

As Concord catering company owner Yevgeny Prigozhin attends a meeting with foreign investors at Konstantin Palace June 16, 2016 in Saint Petersburg, Russia

It must have been a horrifying experience. In 2022, a video circulated on social media showed a man claiming that Prigozhin had been his prison b***h.

The fellow inmate claimed Prighozin had been a member of a community called The Shamed, who live appalling lives being raped and brutalised by their fellow prisoners often on camera.

Even if this account was part of a smear campaign by his enemies, the reality would have been almost as grim. Russian prisons are notoriously brutal and the 29-year-old man who came out of prison would have been a very different individual to the youth who had been locked up nine years earlier.

But over almost a decade of untold misery, he will have learned what he would most need to thrive: the will to survive at any cost.

If Prigozhin was changed, so was his country. Post-USSR Russia was opening up to the world with a vengeance. As Russia embraced hypercapitalism, it was nicknamed the Wild East and, as a prison-hardened hustler, Prigozhin was well-equipped to exploit the many and varied opportunities it offered.

He set up a hotdog stand in St Petersburgs Aprashaka flea market and gravitated towards the grocery and restaurant business.

In 1990s St Petersburg you couldnt run a business without involving the Mafia, who worked hand-in-glove with politicians and the security services: three arenas in which Putin at that time based in the city as an officer in the FSB, the successor to the KGB was becoming a figure of importance.

Prigozhin branched out into running a chain of restaurants and fast-food joints, which he would use to launder dirty money.

According to Ukraines former Deputy Minister of Information Policy, Dmytro Zolotukhin, Prigozhins restaurants often served as venues for Mafia meetings and parties. At one of his restaurants Putin regularly conducted meetings, with Prigozhin in attendance as his personal chef and waiter.

St Petersburg has always been important to Putin. The people he trusts most are his cronies from his hometown and, after he moved to Moscow, many of them went with him. One was Prigozhin, who used the opportunity to further expand his catering business.

He hit the big time when he was awarded a contract to supply meals to the Russian military, which was worth a staggering $1.2 billion for one year. He is alleged to have used part of this booty to fund the Internet Research Agency.

He also won a contract to supply food to Moscows schools. In 2019, a dysentery outbreak was tracked back to his produce. By all accounts, Prigozhin was siphoning off so much money hygiene standards were sacrificed.

His pathological desire for cash trumped the health of children.

However, there was one thing the man from nowhere wanted more than cash and that was to rid himself of the stain of the streets.

When his businesses also began to cater for state visits to Moscow, Prigozhin got what he most craved: the chance to mix with the global elite.

Presidents and heads of state, including former French president Jacques Chirac, were entertained on his floating restaurant New Island. In 2002, he hosted U.S. President George W. Bush there. It was a dream come true.

His rise continued when Putin asked him to become the Kremlins chef. The Russian leader is notoriously paranoid and one who has seen many enemies die by poisoning. By entrusting Prigozhin with his food, the president made clear that his chef was now a member of his innermost circle.

Businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin shows Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin his school lunch factory outside Saint Petersburg on 20 September 2010

Prigozhin's yacht - St Vitamin - has six bedrooms, a dining room, a terrace, a kitchen, rooms for the staff, two decks and a terrace

It was Russias first incursion into Ukraine in 2014 that provided Prigozhin with his chance to diversify into the mercenary business.

With the Kremlin keen to have plausible deniability when it came to the presence of armed men on Ukrainian territory, Prigozhins private army Wagner named after Hitlers favourite composer was the perfect cover.

In the early days, the group took great care to recruit professionals. It hired from the cream of the Russian special forces and paid well.

During the illegal annexation of Crimea in February that year, Wagner troops were among the so-called little green men, soldiers wearing green uniforms without identifying insignia, who walked in and took the peninsula with barely a shot being fired.

Having tasted wealth and glamour and earned a place in the corridors of power, Prigozhin was now the leader of a group at the very centre of Russian foreign policy.

With that came even more riches. By now, Prigozhin was thought to have a net worth in excess of $1 billion. His wife, Lyubov Prigozhina, described as a pharmacist and businesswoman, owned many companies that have now expanded to a chain of boutiques in St Petersburg, as well as a wellness centre in the Leningrad region and a boutique hotel.

He was living on a $105 million St Petersburg estate, which included a house for his daughter Polina, who boasted on social media that the familys yacht named St Vitamin had six bedrooms, a dining room, a terrace, a kitchen, rooms for the staff, two decks and a terrace. Selling hot dogs was a distant dream.

And his mercenary operation was continuing to expand, with forays as far afield as the Middle East and Africa. In Syria, Wagners forces helped to prop up genocidal dictator Bashar al-Assad, while in Africa the group hoovered up mineral resources in countries such as Sudan, Central African Republic and Mali.

Then came the all-out Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24 last year. And Wagner was at its very heart. Indeed, the worse the war got, the better things went for Prigozhin. The more Russian troops the Ukrainians killed, the more Moscow needed Wagners mercenaries. Things got so bad that Prigozhin even went back to the institution that formed him more than any other: prison.

In a now famous video, Prigozhin can be seen telling prisoners including The Shamed to sign up to fight in Ukraine. If they serve six months, they will be pardoned but, he warns them, most wont survive that long.

Yevgeny Prigozhin told inmates they would be pardoned if they survive six months in the war against Ukraine.They should take their own lives instead of being taken prisoner, he said

Bakhmut was where Prigozhin calculated he would win his ultimate glory. Handing the eastern city to Putin would be his lasting triumph. The street boy would, finally, deal with his tsar almost as an equal. But the Ukrainians had other ideas. For almost a year they held out as the Russian army and Wagner pounded the city.

Recently, they have even begun to take back ground. As they have advanced, Prigozhin has imploded in real time and on video.

His growing battle with Shoigu and Gerasimov members of the hated elite that has never accepted him has become an obsession that verges on monomania. He now rages against anyone and everyone: the Russian army whom he accuses of cowardice; those in the Russian state he holds responsible for not adequately supporting his mercenaries; and now even Putin, whom he mocked after his derisory Victory Day parade last week.

After two Russian jets and two helicopters were shot down on Saturday in Russian territory in what appeared to be a spectacular military coup for Kyiv, Prigozhin said they were in fact victims of friendly fire. And according to a sensational U.S. intelligence leak on Sunday, Prigozhin is reported to have said that if Ukraines commanders withdrew troops from Bakhmut, he would give them information about Russian army positions elsewhere.

This claim he has, understandably, vigorously denied because to have done so would have been an unforgivable act of treason.

Is the puppet finally turning against his master? Its hard to say, but its clear Prigozhin is trying to position himself as the only person brave enough to tell Russians including Putin the truth from the front.

In so doing he is becoming for the Kremlin what many of Russias elite have always sniffly said about him: a vulgar embarrassment.

What we are seeing is a desperate man facing ruin. Prigozhin is desperate to get the attention of the tsar who made him everything he is today; desperate for the recognition that his men are dying in the field for Mother Russia.

Modern Russia is a gangster state and Putin is its top gangster. Putin holds the Obshchak the gangs budget to which those underneath contribute. But when the top gangster starts to make mistakes, the others start to worry about the Obshchak and think about seizing their chance.

Prigozhin is now implying that, through his disastrous invasion, Grandpa has made a terrible error. The Obshchak is under threat. And only he is strong enough to tell Grandpa the truth and solve the problem if only he had the tools.

But Prigozhin may have miscalculated badly. If the Kremlin believes he has become a liability, things are likely to get nasty. In recent months, there have been several terror attacks on far-Right bloggers with links to Prigozhin, including one bombed in a cafe he owns. The Russian government blamed Ukraine; Prigozhin claimed it was intra-Russian warfare.

It may now be safer for him to stay in Bakhmut than return to Moscow. For Prigozhin, who has made it his lifes mission to escape the poverty of his youth and enter the Kremlins inner circle, it must be devastating to think everything he has stolen and murdered for may be coming to an end.

His attacks on Grandpa must be seen as the outbursts of a man terrified that its all falling apart. And if he thinks he can topple Putin, he has almost certainly lost his mind. There is only one rule to observe if you want to take on a tsar: win. If not, you are finished.

Another video appeal from 10 May saw Prigozhin (centre) threaten to leave the frontline city

Putin (right) and his 'Chef', Yevgeny Prigozhin, pictured together on 20 September 2010

If his words are sincere and not yet more lies from the master of disinformation, and his relationship with Putin is truly over, his options are both limited and bad.

Returning home would be a death sentence. Staying in Bakhmut could be fatal, too. He could fly to Mali or the Central African Republic to join his soldiers there. But there will be no more luxury yachts or floating restaurants.

As it stands, things look bleak. Unless he can deliver on his promise to take Bakhmut, he looks finished. The man from nowhere may finally be heading back to oblivion. But if that is to be his fate, one thing is clear: he will fight it every step of the way.

David Patrikarakos is UnHerd's foreign correspondent and the author of War In 140 Characters.

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Prigozhin is waging war on Ukraine and Putin. Who will kill him first? - Daily Mail