Wagner Leader Yevgeny V. Prigozhin has turned up in of all places in St. Petersburg , Russia…..
This brings to bear a whole LOT of questions…..
We THOUGHT the Wagner leader had a deal to ‘leave’ Russia?
We had stories of Wanger Troops setting up camp IN Belarus ?
IS THAT the actual situation?
Update...Belarus leader NOW says Wagner troops are NOT in his country…..
(Maybe Belarus woke up and re-thought having a guy after Russia, with 20, 000 troops, is NOT what you’d REALLY want?)
WTF is going on?
Polish and Ukraine troops sent to the Belarus border in reaction to Wagner can be moved back….
Russian troops appear getting ready for the Ukraine offensive push to them…..
Ukraine forces appear to be on their way to retaking Bakhmut…..
The main Western trained Ukraine forces are still being held in reserve, while more Western stuff arrives for them and more get trained…
Update.…Prigozhin’s Moscow home has been raided by Russian cops ….
The president of Belarus told reporters that the Wagner mercenary leader Yevgeny V. Prigozhin, who led a failed mutiny in Russia, had been in St. Petersburg as of Thursday morning. A Pentagon official said he had been in Russia during most of the time since the mutiny.
Here’s what we’re covering:
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Prigozhin is in Russia, Lukashenko says, in contrast with his earlier claims.
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In his new spotlight, the Belarusian leader could gain leverage.
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The ruble hits early war lows, extending a slide that began after Prigozhin’s mutiny.
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The NATO chief projects optimism on Sweden joining, but Turkey’s approval remains far from certain.
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A Russian missile strike kills six people in Lviv.
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Russian troops put machine gun nests on the roof of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, a Ukrainian official says….
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Though the Kremlin said it “does not follow” Prigozhin’s movements, and would not comment on his return to Russia country, a St. Petersburg businessman, speaking Wednesday on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal, confirmed his presence in the country and said authorities had returned funds to him.
Human Rights Watch on Thursday called on both Russian and Ukrainian forces to “immediately stop” using cluster munitions, Human Rights Watch said in a statement Thursday, and urged the United States not to transfer them to Ukraine, as Washington is poised to do. The group published new evidence suggesting that Ukrainian forces have injured civilians by use of the widely banned munitions — which Russian forces have used far more extensively, also causing civilian deaths. Cluster munitions, which scatter bomblets, are “indiscriminate weapons” that continue to cause harm long after the end of a conflict, the rights group said.
Here’s the latest on the war and its impact across the globe.
- Prigozhin “is in St. Petersburg. He is not on the territory of Belarus,” Lukashenko said in response to a question during a meeting with journalists Thursday, the state-owned BelTA news agency reported.
- Flight tracking data from Flightradar24 reported that two jets associated with Prigozhin arrived in Belarus on June 27, one from southern Russia and one from St. Petersburg. Another group that tracks military and flight movements in Belarus, the Belarusian Hajun Project, also reported that flight tracking data indicated that the two Prigozhin-linked jets flew back to St. Petersburg later that day. There is no evidence that he was on board.
- The Kremlin “does not follow [Prigozhin’s] movements,” Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters Thursday after Lukashenko said the Wagner boss was in Russia. “We have neither the opportunity nor the desire to do so,” Peskov said.
- Lukashenko said an offer still stands for Wagner to station its troops in Belarus, a prospect likely to cause concern to neighboring NATO countries. “We offer them several former military camps that were used in the Soviet era,” he said, according to a transcript released by his office. Without giving specifics, he added that Wagner “has a different vision for their placement” and that the issue of relocating Wagner forces has not yet been resolved.
- After chairing a meeting Thursday of delegations from Turkey, Finland and Sweden, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said “we reaffirmed that Sweden’s membership is within reach” — but added that “there are some unsolved issues.” Those issues would be worked on over the weekend before they meet again Monday — the day before the 2023 NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania begins, he said. “Any further delay in Sweden’s membership would be welcomed by the PKK [Kurdistan Workers’ Party] and President Putin,” he said, adding that Sweden has made “amended its constitution and introduced new anti-terrorist legislation.”
- Ankara opposes Sweden’s candidacy over what it sees as the country’s support of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, which Turkey considers a terrorist group. Recently, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan signaled that a Quran-burning protest in Sweden, which was allowed by police, would fuel Ankara’s opposition.
- In Ukraine, six people were killed and 34 others were injured in an overnight Russian cruise missile attack on the western city of Lviv, regional governor Maksym Kozytsky said Thursday on Telegram. Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi called it the largest attack on civilian infrastructure in the city since the war began. Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska, shared a video of the damage, labeling it “another night of terror” that targeted civilians far from the front lines.
- The U.S. ambassador to Ukraine called the strike on Lviv a “vicious Russian missile attack,” adding: “Russia’s repeated attacks on civilians are absolutely horrifying.” Ambassador Bridget Brink said in her Thursday tweet that the United States “will continue to strengthen Ukraine’s ability to defend itself.” Rescue operations continue in Lviv, where about 30 houses were damaged and more than 50 cars hit in the attack, said the regional governor, Kozytsky. He called for greater air defenses, declaring: “We need F-16s!”
- Fierce fighting continues in the Russian-held town of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine, Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said on Telegram. She asserted that Ukraine’s push in the east is going strong. Russian units in some areas on the front lines have begun to vacate their positions, she said, without providing evidence.
- The International Atomic Energy Agency did not discover mines or explosives during recent inspections at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in southeastern Ukraine, the U.N. watchdog agency said Wednesday. In a statement, it requested further access, including to the rooftops of some reactor buildings, to complete its review. Moscow has accused Kyiv of planning to attack the plant “using a warhead stuffed with nuclear waste” — an accusation denied by Ukraine, which earlier alleged that Russian forces have placed “objects resembling explosives” on the roof of the plant.
- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky traveled to Bulgaria on Thursday to hold “substantial talks” with Prime Minister Nikolai Denkov, he tweeted. He will also meet with government officials and lawmakers to discuss security guarantees and “Euro-Atlantic integration” ahead of NATO’s July 11 summit, he said. Bulgaria has been an ally and supplier of arms to Ukraine during the war.
- The United States supports Sweden’s membership to NATO, Biden told Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson during a meeting at the White House on Wednesday. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called his Turkish counterpart the same day to urge Turkey’s support on the matter.
- An ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin was appointed to lead the country’s state news agency, Tass, as Moscow tightens its control over local media. Andrei Kondrashov, a former election spokesman for Putin, will head Russia’s oldest news agency, Reuters reported.
- Zelensky urged President Biden to invite his country into NATO’s fold “now” during an interview with CNN that aired late Wednesday. Zelensky said an invitation to the bloc would invigorate his forces even if membership happens at a later date. He also blamed a lack of “relevant weapons” for a delayed launch of Ukraine’s counteroffensive operation, which he had hoped to begin “much earlier,” he said……