What could have caused the plane crash that reportedly killed Wagner warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin?
Wagner warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin, who led a failed uprising against the Kremlin exactly two months ago, was on board a plane that crashed on Wednesday, according to Russian officials – raising questions as to exactly how the disaster occurred.
The crash took place northwest of Moscow and killed
all on board, said Russia’s aviation agency, apparently including Prigozhin,
chief of the mercenary group that gained prominence for its brutal methods
worldwide and its battleground victories in the Ukraine war.
What happened?
The plane was a private Embraer jet carrying seven
passengers and three crew members, according to Russia’s emergency services
ministry.
It had departed from Moscow and was en route to St.
Petersburg when it crashed near the village of Kuzhenkino, in Russia’s western
Tver region, Russian officials said.
Flight data shows the plane reached an altitude of
some 28,000 feet before it suddenly stopped transmitting tracking details.
The bodies of eight people have been found at the
crash site, according to Russian state media. The official state news agency
TASS reported the plane “burned up” on impact. It had been in the air for about
half an hour.
“Upon freefall the Embraer plane wreckage broke apart
across a 2 km area away from the village [Kuzhenkino] where most of the
fuselage wreckage was found,” state media outlet Russia 24 reported Thursday.
“The majority of the wreckage fell near agricultural
enterprises.”
Russian state media outlet RIA Novosti also reported
Thursday that one of the fragments of the plane was lying on the entry road
into Kuzhenkino, where police had set up a cordon, with several special
services cars parked nearby.
Video published by RIA Novosti showed a plane
plummeting with one wing missing. CNN is unable to confirm the authenticity of
the video, but RIA Novosti claimed it was the moment that an Embraer jet fell
from the sky over the Tver region.
A woman from Kuzhenkino told RIA Novosti she heard the
sound of an airplane near her house on Wednesday evening, that was “something
like a bang, like a shot.”
She continued: “Then suddenly an explosion, I look up
and heard a sound above me – it was like pops, like several explosions.
“The plane started to swerve. Then a plume of smoke
emerged and the plane began to descend, to dive.”
After the plane fell from the sky, residents told the
state media outlet that a black cloud was visible.
Lyudmila Osypova told RIA Novosti that “a neighbor ran
up to me, her hands were shaking. When we got to the window, I saw only one
mushroom cloud, like a black cloud.”
The woman clarified that she did not see the moment of
the crash with her own eyes, but the neighbor claimed that she had.
“She said that it was terrifying. There was a loud
bang, then she turned her head to look and the whole plane was in sparkles of
fire, it was all lit up. Said they saw it caught fire and began to fall,”
Osypova added.
It’s not yet clear what caused the plane to crash.
Russian authorities said they were investigating and conducting search
operations.
“It’s coming down quickly in a spin, and it’s trailing
a lot of smoke. So, this is an aircraft that was on fire. And it looks like
some structural pieces, aerodynamic surfaces, were missing,” veteran science
and aerospace reporter Miles O’Brien told CNN after reviewing footage of the
plane’s fall.
“An aircraft like this … they just don’t
catastrophically drop out of the sky without something very unusual happening,”
he said.
An event like this could be caused by an explosion
either inside or outside the aircraft, O’Brien added – like an explosive going
off on board, or the aircraft being hit by a missile.
David Soucie, a former safety inspector with the US
Federal Aviation Administration, echoed this possibility, saying the plane’s
fall looked like it had only one wing left.
Speaking to CNN, US officials cautioned that it was
too early to draw any conclusions about the cause, but a number of
possibilities are being evaluated, including an on-board explosive device
causing the crash.
At the same time, people familiar with the
intelligence do believe that the downing of the plane was deliberate and that the
goal was to kill Prigozhin.
Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder said
Thursday that it is the Defense Department’s belief that the Wagner chief was
indeed killed in the crash, adding that the Pentagon “doesn’t have any
information to indicate right now” that the plane Prigozhin was on was shot
down by a surface-to-air missile.
Was Prigozhin on
board?
Prigozhin and several top Wagner lieutenants were
named on a list of passengers shared by Russia’s aviation agency.
A Telegram channel linked to Wagner, which had
previously carried the group’s propaganda videos, also issued a statement
saying Prigozhin had been killed. CNN is unable to confirm the claim.
Other channels associated with Prigozhin and Wagner,
including his official Telegram channel, have remained silent.
But there are other clues linking the warlord and the
crash.
Another video released by RIA Novosti purports to show
the crash site, where the last four digits of a registration number are visible
on the plane engine debris: 2795. Prigozhin’s own plane, linked to his
companies and the Wagner group, is registered as RA-02795.
The crew commander of the Embraer plane was an
experienced pilot who started his career flying multipurpose L-410 twin-engine
short-range aircraft, his wife told Russian state TV channel RT.
Svetlana Levshina – who said she learned of the
apparent death of her husband, Alexei Levshin, through the media – told RT he
had been educated at the Sasovsky Civil Aviation Flight School in the Ryazan
region and the St. Petersburg Academy of Civil Aviation.
Was this
payback?
The crash came two months to the day after Prigozhin’s
attempted mutiny against Russia’s military leadership.
Back in June, Prigozhin and his Wagner troops seized
key military sites and marched toward Moscow, where the Kremlin had deployed
heavily armed troops to the streets.
But before they could face off, a deal was struck that
ended the rebellion and sent Prigozhin and his fighters to neighboring Belarus.
It marked the biggest challenge to Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s rule in 23 years. But it also painted a target on Prigozhin’s
back, with some experts speculating the warlord was a dead man walking.
Even US President Joe Biden suggested on Wednesday
that Putin may have been involved in the crash. “I don’t know for a fact what
happened, but I’m not surprised,” he said.
CIA Director Bill Burns and US Secretary of State
Antony Blinken have made similar comments, pointing out Putin’s long history of
payback and the frequency with which Russian critics or dissidents die in
mysterious circumstances.
Bill Browder, a Putin critic and formerly the largest
foreign investor in Russia before he was expelled from the country, said he was
surprised Prigozhin survived for as long as he did after the rebellion.
Other Wagner leaders and Prigozhin allies may now be
either on the run or in hiding, he said.
About 24 hours after the initial reports of the crash
emerged, Putin made his first remarks on the incident as he sent his
“condolences to the families of all the victims.”
“I knew Prigozhin for a very long time, since the
early ’90s,” said Putin, who referred to the Wagner chief in the past tense
throughout his remarks at the Kremlin on Thursday.
“He was a man of difficult fate, and he made serious
mistakes in life,” the president said, though he added that Prigozhin had
“achieved the results needed” both for his own interests and “for a common
cause” at Putin’s request.
“He was a talented man, a talented businessman. He
worked not only in our country, but also abroad, in Africa,” the Russian
president said.
Putin said the Wagner chief had, as far as he knew, returned from Africa shortly before the crash Wednesday.
Wagner fighters have
been active in several African countries, including Mali, where they were
invited by the ruling junta to quell an Islamic insurgency brewing near the
country’s borders with Burkina Faso and Niger.
Wagner fighters have “made a significant contribution”
to Russia’s efforts in Ukraine, Putin added.
What’s the
public reaction so far?
Prigozhin and Wagner have their share of supporters
among the Russian public – which was evident during the failed insurrection.
In cities briefly occupied by Wagner, videos showed
residents cheering them on, taking pictures with fighters, and flagging down
Prigozhin’s car just to shake his hand.
On Wednesday night, people gathered in St. Petersburg
to leave tributes for Prigozhin such as flowers, candles and Wagner chevron
patches.
Video showed members of the public unfurling a large
banner outside Wagner’s headquarters that read, “Wagner PMC. We are together.”
Photos show a range of people mourning at the site,
including young men, couples and teenagers; some are clearly distressed,
embracing each other.
Alexander Dugin, a prominent Russia’s
ultra-nationalist figure, described Prigozhin as a “hero.” He shared an
anecdote in which his daughter Darya – who was killed in a bomb explosion in
Moscow last summer – described Prigozhin in glowing terms at the outset of the
war.
“Prigozhin is so strong and confident, bold, sharp,
that, for sure, no one prays for him. It doesn’t even cross anyone’s mind.
Let’s start praying for him…,” Dugin recounted his daughter saying.
Dugin added on his Telegram channel: “If the
diabolical enemy kills our heroes with precision, it means that we have
heroes.”
The news is likely to meet a far different reaction in
Ukraine. Wagner forces were heavily involved in taking several Ukrainian towns
early this year, delivering tangible progress for the Russian side – but often
at the expense of sending waves of mercenaries into what Prigozhin called “the
meat grinder.”
“There will be no tears shed here at all, if indeed he
has died,” said CNN’s Chief International Security Correspondent Nick Paton
Walsh, currently based in Ukraine.
He added that one Ukrainian soldier on the front lines
had already texted him Wednesday to celebrate the news.
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