Ukraine Recap: Putin Recalls Prigozhin — in Past Tense

Vladimir Putin offered words of appreciation — in the past tense — for Yevgeny Prigozhin, confirming that the leader of the Wagner mercenary group died in a plane crash.

(Bloomberg) — Vladimir Putin offered words of appreciation — in the past tense — for Yevgeny Prigozhin, confirming that the leader of the Wagner mercenary group died in a plane crash.

On Russian state TV, Putin described Prigozhin, who staged an unsuccessful mutiny against the Russian president’s military leadership, as a “talented businessman” and “a man with a complicated fate” who “made serious mistakes in life.” 

 

In Ukraine, its commandos staged a raid in occupied Crimea in a symbolic move on the nation’s Independence Day as more of Kyiv’s forces pressed a counterattack on the mainland that’s threatening to break through Moscow’s lines. The embattled nation braced for more attacks as it celebrated Independence Day. 

Latest Coverage

  • Putin Shores Up Power Base After Prigozhin Killed in Jet Crash
  • Ukrainian Special Forces Stage Nighttime Raid on Occupied Crimea
  • Wagner’s Empire in Africa Will Live On After Prigozhin
  • Yevgeny Prigozhin, Who Led Wagner Mutiny, Is Presumed Dead
  • What Happens to Prigozhin’s Wagner Group After Founder in Crash?
  • Hungarian President Pushes Past Orban to Reset Ukraine Ties 

Markets

Grain prices rose in the US amid uncertainty created by a heat wave and another Russian attack on Ukraine’s crop terminals. Several crop terminals at the Izmail port on the Danube were damaged overnight, curbing its export capacity by 15%, according to Ukrainian Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov.

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