Putin supporters enraged by Russia’s retreat from Ukraine’s Lyman
Two powerful supporters of President Vladimir Putin turned on Russia’s military leadership on Saturday after it ordered a retreat from a key city in eastern Ukraine, a striking sign of dissent within the Russian elite that comes as the Kremlin tries to project an image of strength and unity.
Ramzan Kadyrov, the strongman leader of the southern Russian republic of Chechnya, wrote on the Telegram messaging app that Russia’s top military brass had “covered for” an “incompetent” general who should now be “sent to the front to wash his shame off with blood.”
Yevgeny Prigozhin, the business magnate close to Putin who leads the Wagner Group, an army of mercenaries fighting for Russia in the war, issued a statement an hour later declaring that he agreed with Kadyrov.
“Send all these pieces of garbage barefoot with machine guns straight to the front,” Prigozhin said in an apparent reference to Russia’s military leaders.
The Kremlin’s military leadership, including Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu, a close associate of Putin, has come under increasingly withering criticism in recent months from some pro-war Russian bloggers, who view them as corrupt bureaucrats failing as military strategists. That criticism expanded after Russia’s stunning retreat in northeastern Ukraine last month.
But the fury on Saturday after Russia lost the city of Lyman, a key rail hub, was extraordinary both in its timing and the fact that it was coming not just from commentators on social media, but from senior allies of Putin.
It underscored that the retreat marked a major embarrassment for the Kremlin, coming just 24 hours after the festivities in Moscow marking the attempted annexation of four Ukrainian regions by Putin that Western officials have decried as illegal.
After Russia confirmed the withdrawal, Yevgeny Primakov, the head of a government agency managing ties with Russians abroad, wrote on Telegram that “we have given a Russian city to the enemy” for the first time since World War II.
But the public criticism by Kadyrov and Prigozhin, both of whom have become influential figures in Russia’s war effort operating independently from the Defence Ministry, carried the most significance. It suggested that Putin would now face even more pressure from the hawks in his inner circle to escalate the war.
One concern in the West is that Putin might decide to use a nuclear weapon in Ukraine, a possibility he has hinted at.
In his post on Saturday, Kadyrov became one of the first Russian public officials to openly call for the use of nuclear weapons against Ukraine.
“I don’t know what the Russian Ministry of Defence reports to the commander in chief,” Kadyrov wrote.
“But in my personal opinion, more drastic measures should be taken, up to the declaration of martial law in the border areas and the use of low-yield nuclear weapons.”