

Some were buoyed by the news that Yevgeny Prigozhin’s forces were halting their march to Moscow. Lavr Kornilov’s attempted coup in 1917 that paved the way for the Bolshevik Revolution and the Russian Civil War.Ĭalifornia In L.A.’s Russian-speaking community, Wagner Group rebellion stirs hope, apprehension

The funniest thing about much of the reporting and commentary of Prigozhin’s “March For Justice,” both in real-time and afterward, is how often observers described the spectacle as “ unprecedented.” The Telegraph’s “Ukraine: The Latest” podcast - the best single source for daily coverage of the Ukraine war - described the “unprecedented coup against the Kremlin” at the top of a special Saturday episode, only for the panelists to start debating which coups from Russian history served as the best precedent for the unfolding events in Russia.Įven Putin, in his angry Saturday address, compared Prigozhin’s “stab in the back” to Gen. The only thing we know for certain is that if this is the beginning of the end of Vladimir Putin’s rule, that story won’t begin with the mutinous mercenary warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin attempting to lead the Wagner Group, an armored column of troops, guns a-blazing, into Moscow. Like many people, I was glued to the news for much of Saturday, watching what seemed, at least for a moment, to be the first stages of a coup d’état in Russia - and it still might be.
