Putin's Wagner Compromises Provide Lesson on Ending the War: Ex-Ambassador

Russian President Vladimir Putin's willingness to negotiate with the Wagner Group's armed rebels may offer insight into when he would be willing to end the war in Ukraine, former U.S. ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul said.

Several questions remain in the days following a 24-hour mutiny led by Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin over the weekend, who turned his private mercenaries away from the Ukrainian front lines and toward Moscow on Saturday. Prigozhin, who claimed the rebellion was a protest of the Russian military's actions in Ukraine, has since exiled to Belarus as part of the peace negotiations brokered by Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko to end the conflict without bloodshed.

The rebellion, however, may have exposed some of the Kremlin's weak spots, as Prigozhin has been cleared of any potential investigation by Russian officials and there is no word of other Wagner personnel facing criminal consequence. Putin has since thanked Russian law enforcement for handling and deescalating the situation before it turned into a potential "civil war."

"Rather than doubling down with overwhelming force to crush the mutiny, Putin accepted humiliation instead," said McFaul, who dissected the Russian leader's reaction to Prigozhin's conflict on his Substack channel Sunday.

Putin's Wagner Compromises Provide Lesson on Ukraine
Russian President Vladimir Putin is shown Thursday in Moscow. Experts have offered their assessments on Putin's future handling of the war in Ukraine following the Wagner Group's armed rebellion. Contributor for Getty Images

"He was the rat trapped in the corner that so many Putinologists have told us to fear. But he didn't lash out & go crazy," McFaul wrote. "He didn't take the riskier path of fighting a civil war. He negotiated. Moreover, he cut a deal with someone he just hours earlier labeled a traitor. This decision made Putin look weak."

It is unclear what exactly was laid out as part of Prigozhin's deal to end the rebellion, but Lukashenko confirmed on Tuesday that the Wagner chief had arrived in Belarus as part of the "security guarantees" promised by Putin. It is also unclear what lies ahead for the private military company as a whole, although Russian officials have started to seize some of the mercenaries' "heavy military equipment" for the Russian Armed Forces.

"We still do not know the details, but the compromises [Putin] made [Saturday] may even further undermine his grip on power at home," McFaul continued. "But he took that path anyway."

"The lesson for the war in Ukraine is clear," he added. "Putin is more likely to negotiate and end his war if he is losing on the battlefield, not when there is a stalemate. Those who have argued that Ukraine must not attack Crimea for fear of triggering escalation must now reevaluate that hypothesis. The sooner Putin fears he is losing the war, the faster he will negotiate."

Several experts told Newsweek on Tuesday that Prigozhin's rebellion likely poses a unique opportunity for Ukraine as its military forces launch a counteroffensive to reclaim Russian-occupied territory. As of Sunday, Kyiv claimed control of yet another Ukrainian village along the front line in the southeast, and said that Moscow had lost over 30 tanks in the past week of fighting.

As Guy McCardle, managing editor of Special Operations Forces Report, told Newsweek, "The uprising gives Ukraine a big strategic and psychological boost."

"It's like being a boxer and having your opponent struggling on the ropes: Time to go in for the knockout," McCardle added.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has vowed to not end the war in Ukraine until all occupied land—including the Crimean Peninsula that was annexed in 2014—is returned to Kyiv's possession.

Kremlin officials have said that peace negotiations cannot be reached unless Ukraine's Western allies, including the United States, halt their ongoing sanctions against Russia for its full-scale invasion.

Newsweek has reached out to the Russian Foreign Ministry via email on Tuesday for comment on Prigozhin's rebellion.

Correction: 7/2/23, 4:58 p.m.: This article previously stated that McFaul was a U.S. ambassador to Ukraine instead of Russia. It also previously stated that McFaul's first name was Mark instead of Michael.

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About the writer


Kaitlin Lewis is a Newsweek reporter on the Night Team based in Boston, Massachusetts. Her focus is reporting on national ... Read more

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