The weekend mutiny by members of Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Wagner Group ended almost before it began. He and his fighters crossed into Russia on Friday, June 23, after he claimed the Kremlin’s forces had bombarded his base in Ukraine. A day later, after “capturing” the cities of Rostov-on-Done and Voronezh he pulled the plug and retreated.
Prigozhin explained his decision as: “The moment has come when blood may spill. That’s why… we are turning back our convoys and going back to field camps.”
They had already spilled blood having shot down seven Russian aircraft they felt threatened them, killing a reported 13 crew members. This included six helicopters: an Mi-35 attack helicopter, a Ka-52 attack helicopter, three Mi-8 electronic-warfare helicopters and one Mi-8 transport helicopter.
It was the seventh that will potentially represent the most wide-ranging consequence. It was an Ilyushin Il-22M [NATO “Coot”] airborne command post and radio-relay aircraft, which they hit with a Pantsir-S1 [NATO SA-22 “Greyhound”] Air Defense System, a medium-range surface-to-air missile (SAM).
Franz-Stefan Gady, consulting senior fellow from the International Institute for Strategic Studies said that of the total number of IL-22M planes held by the Russian Air Force was approximately 20, but only around 12 were of the modernized version like the one shot down in the Voronezh region.
While Russian forces deport Ukrainian children from occupied territories to distant Russian provinces, human traffickers are trying to buy babies and sell them in the West.