Amid blasts and leadership rifts, growing Russian unease over war

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Russia is bracing itself for a looming Ukrainian offensive for which its forces may be ill-prepared.

Russia is bracing itself for a looming Ukrainian offensive for which its forces may be ill-prepared.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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With Ukraine stepping up attacks deep inside Russian-controlled territory, there were new signs on Friday of disarray and unease among Russia’s military and political leadership as they brace themselves for a looming Ukrainian offensive, for which their forces may be ill-prepared.

The latest manifestation of those tensions came from Mr Yevgeny Prigozhin, leader of the Wagner mercenary group.

He used what he said were the new, bloody corpses of his fighters as the backdrop for another expletive-laced rant against the top military command.

Not for the first time,

he threatened to pull his fighters out of the long-embattled Ukrainian city of Bakhmut

if Russia’s Ministry of Defence did not provide more ammunition.

That was just one of a series of events that contributed to a sense that the war effort, and by extension the country, was adrift, even as Russia prepares to observe the biggest military holiday of the year on Tuesday.

Two explosions rocked the Kremlin in the middle of the night on Wednesday. Russia claimed it was a

failed drone attack by Ukraine.

Denying the accusation, Ukraine said Russia might have done it to try to muster domestic support for a faltering war effort. No matter the culprit, symbolically it seemed to many to signal Kremlin weakness.

That came in tandem with attacks on a number of oil storage facilities, igniting huge fires, and train derailments both near the border and well away from the battlefields, all attributed to Ukrainian drones or sabotage.

Adding to the building sense of anxiety, the head of Russia’s Security Council, Mr Nikolai Patrushev,

accused the United States in an interview of having started the war.

He said Washington wanted to seize territory ahead of a supposed cataclysmic explosion of a volcano at Yellowstone National Park, which he said would wipe out life in North America.

“Everyone is nervous, sitting on the edge of their seats,” said Mr Clifford Kupchan, a Russia specialist and chair of the Eurasia Group, a Washington-based political risk assessment firm. “You have the most revered Russian military holiday dovetailing with the coming Ukrainian offensive and all of these explosive events.”

The holiday, Victory Day,

commemorates the Soviet Union’s triumph over Nazi Germany.

In the last two decades, Russian President Vladimir Putin has transformed the military spectacle into a centrepiece of his rule.

That ratchets up the stakes for Moscow, Mr Kupchan said. “It is yet another cause of the high tension that we are seeing right now and the jitters on both sides,” he added.

Mr Putin has remained silent, as he sometimes has in the past amid rapid-fire events.

But he is under some pressure himself to rally the nation in his scheduled nationwide Victory Day speech.

“The longer Putin is silent, the more everyone will think that he is confused and does not know what to do,” Mr Abbas Gallyamov, a former Kremlin speechwriter turned political analyst, wrote on Telegram.

In one sign of heightened security fears, Red Square, at the very heart of Moscow, and the venue for the viewing stands for the elite during the parade, has been closed to the public since the end of April. Numerous parades around the country are being scaled back or cancelled.

The one in Moscow, however, is expected to be the usual, carefully choreographed display of raw power, even if the reputation of the Russian military has been diminished.

Some pro-war bloggers have lashed out at the business-as-usual parade, saying the men and weapons would be better deployed in Ukraine.

Part of that is because so much is riding on the outcome of the anticipated Ukrainian drive.

“Many people see this offensive as decisive in the war,” said Mr Dmitri Kuznets, who monitors the military bloggers for Meduza, an independent Russian website in Riga, Latvia. “Everyone is very emotional and people’s interpretation depends on their political views.”

In a sign of the growing anxiety, the Russian occupation authorities on Friday ordered civilians living near the front line in the Zaporizhzhia region, in southern Ukraine, to leave their homes and businesses.

“I would like to stress that this is a mandatory measure to ensure the safety of residents living in front-line territories,” the Kremlin-appointed governor of the region, Mr Yevgeny Balitsky, said in a statement. He also declared that he thought the offensive had already begun.

Although many do not expect Ukraine to launch its attack until the spring mud hardens in mid-May, various pinpricks inside Russia were seen by military analysts as designed to keep Russia from moving more forces towards the front lines.

Over the course of the war, Mr Prigozhin and the generals have manoeuvred bureaucratically and on the battlefield to gain the upper hand in directing the war and to win Mr Putin’s confidence.

The President, in turn, has played the two sides off against each other to ensure, analysts say, that neither amasses too much power.

Mr Prigozhin’s threat to leave was not fully credited, seen as just another in a series of rash statements or a new attempt to capture Mr Putin’s attention.

There was no immediate official reaction, but a previous outburst by Mr Prigozhin did win him some of the ammunition and recruits that he wanted, although the numbers remain murky.

Several Russia analysts said they expected the Defence Ministry to meet some of Mr Prigozhin’s demands this time, too, since there is no ready alternative to his estimated 10,000 men in Bakhmut.

Both Ukrainian and US intelligence officials said they had seen no movements by the Wagner forces that suggested repositioning, and regarded Mr Prigozhin’s comments more as a sign of the chronic palace intrigue and bureaucratic manoeuvring among the Russian leadership.

“I would strongly doubt that the Russians are going to withdraw from Bakhmut, so that is histrionics,” Mr Kupchan said. NYTIMES

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