Wagner Group Coup: The beginning of the end?

After the Wagner Group mutiny many are asking how destabilizing it was for Vladimir Putin

After the Wagner Group mutiny, many are asking how destabilizing it was for Vladimir Putin. Vladimir Putin’s, consequences for Russia and Ukraine are currently unknown.

As on record, many international political analysts agree that Russian President Vladimir Putin will emerge weaker following the brief mutiny staged by Wagner Group leader Yevgeny Prigozhin over the weekend. But as in when is yet not certain.

Is this the beginning of the end?

“For me, it is the beginning of a collapse of the system,” Irina Scherbakova, a Russian historian and co-founder of the human rights organization Memorial, which is banned in Russia, told German national radio broadcaster Deutschlandfunk.

Putin lacks domestic troops

It is now clear that Putin now deprived himself of unrestricted power in Russia through his war in Ukraine, which violates international law because he allowed his military power base to slip away into his own country. But do the recent events in Russia really amount to political?

For Snyder, the apparent “apathy indicates that most Russians at this point just take for granted that they will be ruled by the gangster with the most guns, and will just go on with their daily lives regardless of who that gangster happens to be.”

He is certain of one thing: “Backed into a corner, Putin saves himself.”

Most of the Wagner Group forces are no longer deployed on the frontline in Ukraine

It is unclear, whether the Ukrainian army on the front lines can derive any benefits from the events in Russia.

Source: OccupyGh.com 

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Audrey Osabutey: Audrey Osabutey is a dedicated writer, with a degree in Journalism from the Ghana Institute of Journalism. I specialize on Celebrity news and Lifestyle as well. Contact me on Email: forrreal987@gmail.com or on Phone: +233 2403 984 44