30 August 2023

Early Intelligence Suggests Prigozhin Was Assassinated, U.S. Officials Say

Michael R. Gordon

The plane carrying Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the Wagner paramilitary group, crashed as the result of an assassination plot but wasn’t shot down by a surface-to-air missile, U.S. officials said.

The preliminary U.S. government assessments, which officials stressed are incomplete, suggest that a bomb exploded on the aircraft or that some other form of sabotage caused the crash northwest of Moscow.

The Russian government has said it is investigating the cause of the crash, but hasn’t offered an explanation. Social-media channels close to Prigozhin’s Wagner have claimed that the aircraft was downed by a Russian military antiaircraft missile.

“We have no information at this time to suggest that a surface-to-air missile was launched against the private aircraft reportedly carrying Yevgeny Prigozhin,” a senior Biden administration official said.

U.S. satellites with infrared sensors can detect the heat from missile launches, and none was detected at the time the plane was downed, defense officials said.

U.S. officials, however, haven’t determined what specifically led to the crash and have stopped sort of publicly asserting that the downing was an assassination, although numerous officials have privately concluded that.

“Our initial assessment is that it is likely Prigozhin was killed,” Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder, a Pentagon spokesman, said at a briefing Thursday. It was the first time the U.S. confirmed Prigozhin’s death.

Ryder didn’t describe the downing as an assassination, and said the U.S. is still assessing the episode.

The day after Prigozhin’s death, his supporters flocked to makeshift memorials to pay tribute to a man who had staged a short-lived uprising against Moscow.

Russian President Vladimir Putin commented publicly on the death of Wagner leader Yevgeny Prigozhin on Thursday. Photo: Mikhail Klimentyev/AFP/Getty Images

Russian President Vladimir Putin broke his initial silence Thursday and offered condolences to the families of the victims.

He offered some praise for Prigozhin’s accomplishments, but also said that the Wagner chief had committed some serious mistakes.

“I want to note that these are the people who significantly contributed to our common cause of fighting the neo-Nazi regime in Ukraine,” he said of the Wagner members on the plane. “We remember it, we know it, and we will not forget it.”

In St. Petersburg, Prigozhin’s hometown, people came to place flowers, candles and military patches with Wagner’s skull-and-crossbones logo outside the building that once served as the company’s headquarters in the city.

“It feels like losing a father. He was everything for us,” said a man who came to mourn Prigozhin.

Official information on the crash and its causes has been scant. Authorities said all 10 people aboard the plane had died, and Russia’s Investigative Committee launched a criminal probe into alleged violations of air-safety rules.

Russian state media said 10 bodies had been recovered from the site and on Thursday published footage of investigators working on the scene. Police have cordoned off the entrance to the village in the Tver region where the plane had crashed.

Local media reported that the bodies of the victims had been loaded into cars belonging to a funeral service company and driven away. State news agency RIA cited local residents saying they had heard an explosion before they saw the plane plummeting to earth. The agency said one part of the plane had landed 2 miles from the main crash site.

Numerous Telegram channels close to Wagner Group posted a video showing a fighter in Wagner uniform kneeling and crying before a makeshift shrine outside a former Wagner office in Novosibirsk, a city in southern Russia.

“All of us are emotional now, but we have to hold ourselves together,” Grey Zone, a channel close to Wagner, wrote. “Don’t do anything stupid.”

As with previous deaths of rivals to Putin, the Kremlin is likely to sow confusion over who killed Prigozhin. Russia’s state-run media has already begun spinning contradictory suggestions—from blaming Ukraine to suggesting that a rival of Prigozhin planted a bomb aboard his plane.

The Kremlin can only benefit from uncertainty because Prigozhin was a divisive, if popular, figure within Russia, as well as a protégé of Putin. While the Kremlin has eliminated rivals before, Prigozhin was the first high-level loyalist whom Putin is suspected of killing for alleged transgressions.

His death is problematic because he was a hero to millions of disgruntled veterans and common Russians for his war record and his truculent denunciations of alleged sloth and corruption in the military.

In the Kremlin, “there is likely sensitivity to how the Wagner fighters and their sympathizers will take the news” of Prigozhin’s death, said Eric Green, former Russia adviser to President Biden’s National Security Council, now a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington.

At the same time, Prigozhin was a dangerous rival to Russia’s top defense officials, most of whom are likely clear-eyed about who was behind his murder. Green said that the Kremlin also might be more definitive about who killed Prigozhin as time passes, noting that in the poisoning of other rivals—such as political critic Alexei Navalny and ex-spies Sergei Skripal and Alexander Litvinenko—“the Kremlin initially cultivated ambiguity, but in subsequent months dropped unmistakable hints as to its authorship.”

A U.K. government official said that while Western governments were still gathering information and insight into the crash, the most likely suspect of foul play would be Russia’s Federal Security Service, or FSB, its domestic intelligence agency.

The warlord once fielded a force of some 50,000 troops in Ukraine, who spearheaded a monthslong battle to capture the city of Bakhmut and hand Russia its most significant victory in months. He later said Wagner had lost 20,000 men in the fight for the city, most of them convicts recruited from Russian jails. The contingent of Wagner fighters that marched toward Moscow in June numbered only several thousand men.

Vladimir Osechkin, an exiled Russian rights activist who helps defectors flee the country and is writing a book on Wagner, said a rift is growing between members of Wagner’s military command and those with access to its finances after the death of the group’s leading figures.

Among the victims alongside Prigozhin and Wagner’s top commander Dmitry Utkin, according to Russia’s civil aviation authority, was Valery Chekalov, who had been tasked with transferring Russian state money designated to Wagner through dozens of offshore companies tied to the group.

“They have no Plan B now that Prigozhin is gone,” Osechkin said, citing what he said were screenshots of text exchanges between Wagner members that had been forwarded to him. “The most important Wagner figures died on that plane.”

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