Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday assailed those responsible for the armed revolt that plunged his regime into crisis as traitors who played into the hands of those who wanted to see the country “drowned in a bloody domestic strife.”
Addressing the nation for the first time since the short-lived rebellion ended over the weekend, Putin appeared defiant but offered little clarity about his planned response.
“Any kind of blackmail, any attempts to create internal turmoil are doomed to failure,” he said, claiming his forces could have crushed a mutiny that posed the biggest challenge to his rule in more than 20 years had the mercenary fighters not turned back from Moscow.
Putin also thanked the Russian people for their support and said the crisis had only served to unite the country.
Earlier Monday, Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin issued a defiant defense of his own actions and denied trying to topple Putin.
The Kremlin said over the weekend that all charges against the rebel would be dropped and that he would be allowed to seek exile. Putin’s statement didn’t refer to Prigozhin directly by name, but he did say he would keep his promise to Wagner fighters that they could join the Russian military or move safely to Belarus.
It followed a day in which the Russian president and other top officials had scrambled to restore a sense of authority after the unprecedented challenge to their power.
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