Event Recording / Europe & Central Asia 28 June 2023 1 minute Wagner Rebellion Explained (Online event, 28 June 2023) In this online event, Crisis Group experts discuss the implications of the Wagner rebellion for Putin’s rule, the war in Ukraine, Russian foreign politics and the country’s power projections abroad. Share Facebook Twitter Email Linkedin Whatsapp Save Print On 24 June, Vladimir Putin faced the biggest challenge in over two decades at Russia’s helm: a mutiny by a mercenary group fighting alongside Russian forces in Ukraine. Yevgeny Prigozhin, the founder of the mercenary force known as the Wagner Group, took control of Rostov-on-Don, a city of a million people and main staging ground for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Several thousand Wagner fighters then advanced toward Moscow in a so-called “march for justice”, reportedly shooting down Russian army helicopters and a fighter jet. What Putin dubbed a “betrayal” came to an end a day after it began. Prigozhin announced he was turning around his forces within 200km of Moscow and going to Belarus, under a deal brokered by President Alexander Lukashenko. Crisis Group experts discuss the implications of the rebellion for Putin’s rule, the war in Ukraine, Russian foreign politics and the country’s power projections abroad. Panellists: Pauline Bax, Crisis Group Africa Deputy Program Director Oleg Ignatov, Crisis Group Russia Senior Analyst Olga Oliker, Crisis Group Europe and Central Asia Program Director Simon Schlegel, Crisis Group Ukraine Senior Analyst Moderator: Alissa de Carbonnel, Crisis Group Europe and Central Asia Deputy Program Director Loading Video Related Tags Contributors Pauline Bax Deputy Program Director, Africa PaulineBax1 Oleg Ignatov Senior Analyst, Russia OlegIgnatov18 Olga Oliker Program Director, Europe and Central Asia OlyaOliker Simon Schlegel Senior Analyst, Ukraine Simon_Schlegel_ Alissa de Carbonnel Deputy Program Director, Europe and Central Asia AdeCar More for you Podcast / Europe & Central Asia Is This the End? Wagner in Russia, Ukraine and Africa Commentary / Europe & Central Asia Saying the Quiet Part Out Loud: Russia’s New Vision for Taking on the West