LMAO no it wasn't. |
Completely false. Russia has diverted significant resources to the war effort along with diverting industry to support the war. And it's still not enough. |
Thing is that the first attempt cleared the runway for the next attempt. |
Or not. |
It definitely made Putin look incredibly weak and clownish. Here he funded his own private military with billions in Russian taxpayer dollars (after lying to the Russian public about it) only to have that private army turn on him, and they got all the way to the Moscow suburbs unopposed. |
Gee this all seems to have taken some of the wind out of the pro-Russia trolls' sails 😆 |
NYT is reporting that the former top Russian commander in Ukraine had advance knowledge of Prigozhin's rebellion, and may have helped him plan the logistics. There are also signs of support from other Russian generals.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/27/us/politics/russian-general-prigozhin-rebellion.html |
Wow. Wait. Just to oust Shoigu, who is despised by a lot of people? ... or for a real coup to oust Putin?!? Because if it's the latter, Putin better watch his back. They're not done with him yet. On the other hand, Putin's been picking off oligarchs one by one, through various means, and Surovikin may be next. But he's just one man, and there's a whole lot of "them". |
They are watching their backs. |
General surovikin and prighozin are known to be close . It is said that , prighozin didn't like it when putin replaced his buddy with Valery gerasimov who's currently their equivalent of the chairman of the joints chief of staff.
It's a starting to make sense, doesn't it? Guys travel hundreds of miles and reach the outskirts of Moscow and the people in charge of counter measures stood by in deafening silence. |
Thing is, surovikin isn't really an oligarch though.He's a respected general who earned the nickname of 'Armageddon' for his alleged propensity to rain down unspeakable levels of violence on opponents . If putin—through the FSB—chooses to off him, what are the chances that his loyalists choose not to retaliate? |
As a certified Russian bot I don't disagree. Its a great lesson in how much damage even a single scorpion can do. Even half-scorpions. |
But... where does that leave Putin, then, if he lets other powerful men make very significant decisions for him? It smells like a "soft coup" from a group of generals in the army. World history tells us that's usually how coups happen, actually. And then we have Russia governed by hardline, "Armageddon" generals??? Delightful. |
So many people cheering for Putin's ouster don't realize just how good we have it. He governs in a very restrained manner, and reels in many of the more extreme elements in Russian society. These people should note that disaffection with Putin is coming from the side that doesn't want to hold back as much. |