Russia Moves To Take Direct Control Of Wagner Group, Founder Prigozhin Vows Resistance

Russia appears to be moving to take direct control of Wagner Group, after months of infighting between Defence officials and the private military group.

Deputy Defence Minister Nikolai Pankov said on Saturday “volunteer formations” will be asked to sign contracts directly with the ministry of defence, a statement widely believed to target the group.

But in a furious statement on Sunday, Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin said his forces would boycott the contracts.

“Wagner will not sign any contracts with Shoigu,” Prigozhin said in response to a request for comment on the defence ministry’s announcement. “Shoigu cannot properly manage military formation.”

He insisted that his group was well integrated with the Russian military, but said that its effectiveness would be damaged by having to report to the Defence Minister.

The private military group has played a major role in the war in Ukraine, fighting on the side of Russian forces.

But Prigozhin, who is said to hold political ambitions of his own, has been embroiled in a public dispute with Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu and military chief Valery Gerasimov for months.

He has repeatedly accused the pair of incompetence and of deliberately undersupplying Wagner units fighting in Ukraine.

The ministry said on Sunday that all “volunteer detachments” will have to sign contracts by the end of the month.

The move is aimed at bringing volunteers, including the mercenary group, under the ministry’s control.

Mr Prigozhin has repeatedly criticised Russia’s top military leaders for failing to fight the war in Ukraine properly.

While Saturday’s announcement did not directly reference Wagner or any other paramilitary groups, Russian media suggested that the new contracts were a move to bring Prigozhin and his forces under control.

But the defence ministry said the move was designed to “increase the effectiveness” of Russian units fighting in Ukraine.

“This will give volunteer formations the necessary legal status, create common approaches to the organization of comprehensive support and the fulfilment of their tasks,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that the contracts must be signed by 1 July.

The long-running tensions between the Wagner Group and the Army have threatened to boil over in recent weeks.

Last week the group kidnapped a senior frontline Russian Army commander Lieutenant Colonel Roman Venevitin, after accusing him of opening fire on a Wagner vehicle near Bakhmut.

Colonel Venevitin was later released, and in a video shared by Russian military bloggers he accused the group of stoking “anarchy” on Russia’s frontlines by stealing arms, forcing mobilised soldiers to sign contracts with the group and attempting to extort weapons from the Defence Ministry.

Prigozhin called the comments – which appeared to be read from a script – “absolutely total nonsense.”

He has also suggested that he is ready to deploy his troops on Russian soil, saying on Telegram that Wagner was ready to fight against insurrectionist forces in the Belgorod region.

In December, the US estimated that Wagner had around 50,000 troops fighting in Ukraine.

And the mercenary group has increasingly become a tool of Russian state power around the world. Its troops are currently believed to have been deployed in Mali, Central African Republic, Sudan and Libya.

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