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The China-Russia Partnership After Prigozhin’s Mutiny: The View From Beijing 

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Features | Diplomacy | East Asia

The China-Russia Partnership After Prigozhin’s Mutiny: The View From Beijing 

While Chinese analysts – and likely the government – recognize the weaknesses of the Putin regime, Beijing is unlikely to fundamentally reassess its alignment with Moscow in the near term.

The China-Russia Partnership After Prigozhin’s Mutiny: The View From Beijing 

Russian matryoshka dolls with portraits of Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and Russian President Vladimir Putin are displayed among others for sale at a souvenir shop in Moscow, Russia, on March 21, 2023.

Credit: AP Photo/Dmitry Serebryakov

June 24 saw the swift beginning and end of a puzzling series of events in Russia. The mercurial Yevgeny Prigozhin, leader of the private military contractor Wagner Group, announced that his fighters would be undertaking what he termed a “march for justice” aimed squarely against the “incompetence” of the leadership of the Russian Ministry of Defense, namely Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of Staff Valery Gerasimov.  

Then, in a belated address to the nation at 10 a.m. on June 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin, accused the unnamed leaders of the mutiny of outright “treason” and of endangering the country’s security as it repels “the aggression of neo-Nazis and their handlers.” This, Putin declared, was a “stab in the back” akin to the breakdown and collapse of Tsarist Russia in 1917 when “intrigues, and arguments behind the army’s back” resulted in “the greatest catastrophe” of the “destruction of the army and the state, loss of huge territories, resulting in a tragedy and a civil war.” The only beneficiaries then, and by implication now, “were various political chevaliers of fortune and foreign powers who divided the country, and tore it into parts.”

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