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Wagner mercenary revolt: Could it help Ukraine?

Will Yevgeny Prigozhin’s march on Moscow with his Wagner mercenaries weaken Russia in its war on Ukraine?

Likely not, at least for now, say experts in both Washington and Kyiv. During Mr. Prigozhin’s escapade, Russian units did not leave Ukraine to defend Russia’s capital. Dozens of Russian missiles were fired deep into Ukraine.

Why We Wrote This

Yevgeny Prigozhin’s march on Moscow with his Wagner mercenaries was aimed at Moscow. But its effects might be most important in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s summer counteroffensive continues to inch forward.

The question is whether Mr. Prigozhin’s show of defiance will have an effect in the long term. Russian troops, already battered by fighting and shortages, might become more disillusioned. Infighting in the Russian military leadership could escalate.

Ukrainian soldiers watched the extraordinary events in Russia with glee, say Ukrainian sources. One Ukrainian drone commander  produced a video of himself sitting on a military vehicle, eating popcorn while watching news about the Russian insurrection.

Meanwhile, Wagner troops will no longer fight as units. Instead, they will be integrated into the Russian army.

In the past, Wagner brigades have been among Ukraine’s toughest foes. They were crucial to Russia’s retaking of Bakhmut, the last real victory to which Moscow can point.

“Will they be effective without Prigozhin there in the field, in the trenches with them?” says Evelyn Farkas, former deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine, and Eurasia. 

Two days after mercenary leader Yevgeny Prigozhin led his Wagner fighters in a convoy toward Moscow and then retreated, one of the most important questions raised by his action remains what effect – if any – it will have on the war in Ukraine. 

The most likely answer is that it may not make much of a difference – at least, not yet. Ukraine’s counteroffensive to liberate the fifth of its territory still under Russian occupation is so far carrying on with little change. In that context Saturday’s act might end up more of a sideshow than main event.

No Russian military units on the Ukrainian lines turned to rush to Moscow’s defense Friday or Saturday. There was no pause in Russian missile salvos as Ukrainian forces continued to inch forward.

Why We Wrote This

Yevgeny Prigozhin’s march on Moscow with his Wagner mercenaries was aimed at Moscow. But its effects might be most important in Ukraine.

The unknown factor remains longer term effects. Battlefield morale, for instance, may tip even more toward Ukraine’s favor, as Russian troops learn more about the infighting and dysfunction among their leaders.

The loss of Wagner regiments – with individual mercenaries integrating into the Russian military – could deprive Russia of some of its most effective units, just as Ukraine’s counteroffensive lurches into gear.

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