NewsCrumbling Wagner Group: Exodus cuts force by 90% in a year

Crumbling Wagner Group: Exodus cuts force by 90% in a year

The Wagner Group is on the brink. British intelligence revealed details
The Wagner Group is on the brink. British intelligence revealed details
Images source: © PAP | PAP/EPA/YURI KOCHETKOV

6:11 AM EDT, August 24, 2024

Over the past year, the Russian Wagner Group has undergone reorganization. As reported by the British Ministry of Defense, citing intelligence findings, due to numerous departures of key commanders, the Wagner Group's numbers have decreased by about 90 percent.

It has been a year since the accident in which the Wagner Group leaders were killed, including Yevgeny Prigozhin and founder Dmitry "Wagner" Utkin.

Since then, many members of the Wagner Group have chosen to leave its ranks. Former chief of staff, Andrey "Sedoy" Troshev, moved to the Russian Ministry of Defense, where he likely joined a private military unit created by the department, known as Redut.

Troshev was tasked with creating the Volunteer Corps to fight in Ukraine. Alexander "Ratibor" Kuznetsov, former commander of the 1st Assault Unit, became a member of the Chechen special forces unit Akhmat. Boris "Zombie" Nizhevenok, former commander of the 3rd Assault Unit, took command of the volunteer unit Vostok-W in May of this year.

The Wagner Group is getting smaller

After Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine and the Russian army's initial failures, Yevgeny Prigozhin significantly transformed the Wagner Group. The organization, formerly an elite mercenary unit, became a massive military formation of thousands of individuals.

In the new structure, prisoners mass-recruited from Russian penal colonies played a dominant role. This transformation aimed to strengthen Russian forces on the front but also sparked numerous controversies, both in Russia and abroad, regarding the recruitment methods and the brutal actions of this group.

However, there are now fewer Wagner fighters. "Many veterans of the Wagner Group followed these and other former commanders, leaving the group," notes the British Ministry of Defense. Compared to the peak personnel, which in 2023 numbered about 50,000 individuals, the Wagner Group probably currently has only about 5,000 fighters, mainly deployed in Belarus and Africa.

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