Business
Live Updates | Fallout from Russian mercenary armed revolt
The latest on the aftermath of the armed rebellion declared by Russian mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin:
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Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki says the mutiny attempted by Wagner Group mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin showed that "the situation in Russia is uncertain” and provides a reason for Poland and its NATO allies to intensively monitor what is happening in the country.
“Russia shows it’s an unpredictable state,” Morawiecki said on Monday after a meeting he and the prime ministers of Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Hungary met in Slovakia's capital. The Central European countries nations are part of an informal group known as the Visegrad Four.
Slovakia's prime minister, said the aborted rebellion by Wagner's private army over the weekend indicated “the situation in Russia is not as stable as it appeared to be a couple weeks or months ago.”
"It seems there’s not just a single Russian army, but more of them, which might turn to be an advantage for Ukraine,” Odor said.
Prigozhin's mercenaries have fought alongside the Russian army in Ukraine, but the group's future is uncertain.
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KEY DEVELOPMENTS:
Russia tries to project a sense of order after mercenary revolt
Chaos in Russia is a morale booster for Ukraine as it pushes forward with counteroffensive
European Union urges caution as but uncertainty swirls about Putin's grip on power
Belarus deal to take in leader of Russian rebellion puts him in an even more repressive nation
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A spokesman for German Chancellor Olaf Scholz reacted cautiously Monday when asked to assess what had happened in Russia over the weekend.
“First of all, this is an internal Russian matter and we are monitoring what is happening there,” Steffen Hebestreit told reporters in Berlin. “What actually occurred there, only time will tell.”
Hebestreit declined to say what impact the latest events would have on the diplomatic efforts to begin peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine. But he said that Scholz’s top foreign policy adviser, Jens Ploetner, attended a closed-door meeting over the weekend in Copenhagen between Western countries and the so-called BRICS group of major emerging economies.
Russia, which would normally attend such a meeting, wasn’t present.
The meeting had been proposed by Ukraine, Hebestreit said, but he wouldn't comment on the content of the meeting, nor on whether Germany had been in contact with Russian officials over the weekend, including about the safety of Moscow’s nuclear arsenal.
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Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu has made his first public appearance since a mercenary uprising demanded his ouster.
Shoigu appeared in a video Monday inspecting troops in Ukraine, apparently in a bid to project a sense of order after a weekend that saw armed rebels seize a Russian city and march seemingly unopposed on the capital.
Shoigu is one of three powerful Russian military leaders whose diverging interests erupted into mutiny on Friday when thousands of Wagner Group mercenaries headed from Ukraine deep into Russia, before turning around Saturday after less than 24 hours.
He is the first of the leaders to appear publicly since then. The Defense Ministry released the video with Shoigu in it, but it was unclear when it was filmed.
Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin declared a “march of justice” to oust Shoigu and General Staff chief Gen. Valery Gerasimov late Friday. He withdrew after Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko brokered a deal to allow Prigozhin to move to Belarus and receive an amnesty, along with his soldiers.
Russian President Vladimir Putin hasn’t made any public appearances since issuing a brief televised address on Saturday during the mutiny.
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Speaking to reporters before chairing a meeting of European Union foreign ministers in Luxembourg, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that the Wagner revolt showed that the war in Ukraine is “cracking Russia’s political system.”
“The monster that Putin created with Wagner, the monster is biting him now,” Borrel said Monday. “The monster is acting against his creator. The political system is showing fragilities, and the military power is cracking.”
Upon arriving to the meeting in Luxembourg, Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg called Prigozhin a “megalomaniac mercenary leader,” and said the Wagner chief's mutiny showed that “the evil spirit is out of the bottle” in Putin's Russia.
"You almost have the feeling that the Russian president is like the sorcerer’s apprentice again. He can’t get rid of the ghosts he called, and they’re going to haunt him now,” Schallenberg said.
During comments in Vilnius, Lithuania, on Monday, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg called the weekend mutiny “an internal Russian matter,” but said it was “yet another demonstration of the big strategic mistake that President Putin made with his illegal annexation of Crimea (in 2014) and the war against Ukraine.”
Stoltenberg said that Ukraine’s counteroffensive is well underway, and that “the more land they are able to liberate, the stronger their hand will eventually be at the negotiating table, to achieve a just and lasting peace.”
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Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine: https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
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