Heid the Ba wrote:I wonder if this wasn't just a way to get out for Prigozhin to get out from under the shitstorm in Ukraine.
So he couldn't just quit?
Richard A wrote:I'm not sure just quitting was an option.
Richard A wrote:But yes, I'm not sure anyone is going to be offering Prigozhin life insurance. Unless he uses Belarus as a convenient platform from which to go somewhere else fairly smartly.
Richard A wrote:Putin may want him to suddenly fall ill, but not before there's been time for the 25,000 to properly disperse, preferably back to Ukraine.
Richard A wrote:And him disappearing permanently from the political scene, even if continuing to breathe somewhere else, could be good enough. From Putin's point of view, Litvinenko, Nemtsov et al. continued to cause trouble, so if Prigozhin were not to ... And from Prigozhin's, not only does he continue to live, but there are opportunities enough in plenty of other places for him to do what he does best.
Richard A wrote:He's a mercenary, so finding someone else to pay him to brutalise a population should be OK. Even more if, as many do, the new paymaster doesn't have designs on integrating Prigozhin's dogs of war into the regular armed forces.
Russia 146,424,729 48.56%
Ukraine 41,130,432 13.64%
Uzbekistan 36,297,477 12.04%
Kazakhstan 19,886,092 6.59%
Azerbaijan 10,135,373 3.36%
Tajikistan 9,506,000 3.15%
Belarus 9,200,617 3.05%
Kyrgyzstan 7,100,000 2.35%
Turkmenistan 6,431,000 2.13%
Georgia 3,736,400 1.24%
Armenia 2,981,200 0.99%
Lithuania 2,862,274 0.95%
Moldova 2,604,000 0.86%
Latvia 1,885,400 0.63%
Estonia 1,365,884 0.45%
------------------------------------
Total 301,546,878 100.00%
Heid the Ba wrote:Lukashenko (sp?) says Prigozhin is in Belarus. And if you can't trust him, who can you trust.
Мастер wrote:None of the narratives I'm hearing make a whole lot of sense.
Мастер wrote:So there are reports that the criminal case against Prigozhin has not been dropped, as it allegedly should have been under this deal.
Richard A wrote:I hadn't seen that. Although friends in South Africa told me before the BRICS meeting that they weren't confident that Ramaphosa would agree to extradite Putin even if he had turned up.
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