Article 6CF3X Putin and Prigozhin avert bloodshed, but their feud is not over | Andrew Roth

Putin and Prigozhin avert bloodshed, but their feud is not over | Andrew Roth

by
Andrew Roth
from World news | The Guardian on (#6CF3X)

The Russian president must make good on the threats he made on TV, or take the risk of appearing weak

Though they've avoided open bloodshed, it is hard to imagine that Vladimir Putin and Yevgeny Prigozhin will ever be reconciled. The Russian leader has a political motive to deal harshly with his maverick warlord or risk appearing weak, a cardinal sin in Kremlin politics. And the Russian leader has never been known as one to forgive a betrayal.

The extraordinary events of the past 48 hours - Prigozhin's armed mutiny, Putin's call for brutal" reprisals, an 11th-hour peace deal - might appear to have resolved themselves. The leader of the Wagner mercenary group has halted his armed mutiny and march on the Russian capital, apparently in exchange for an amnesty and exile in Belarus. He is no longer on course for civil war with Moscow.

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