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Putin's reign may not survive the impending fall of Crimea
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Putin's reign may not survive the impending fall of Crimea

The Hill · Jun 25, 2026, 11:00 AM

Key takeaways

  • But Russia as a whole, and Russian-occupied Crimea in particular, might have been better off had the man once known as Putin s chef succeeded in overthrowing the regime in Moscow.
  • Prigozhin understood something Putin could not: The Kremlin is incapable of defeating Ukraine on a conventional military basis.
  • On the day of Prigozhin s uprising, Russian dead and wounded numbered just over 223,000.

Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.

Prigozhin failed and paid with his life. But Russia as a whole, and Russian-occupied Crimea in particular, might have been better off had the man once known as Putin s chef succeeded in overthrowing the regime in Moscow.

Prigozhin understood something Putin could not: The Kremlin is incapable of defeating Ukraine on a conventional military basis.

Putin still appears unable to grasp this. On the day of Prigozhin s uprising, Russian dead and wounded numbered just over 223,000. Three years later, Russian losses in Ukraine have swelled more than sixfold, nearing 1.4 million.

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