![]() ![]() ![]() They, not only attack the enemy but also defends the base like a boss. Those who do understand, aren’t saying anything.Tanks are an integral part of the military. No one outside of the Kremlin and The Wagner Group’s Saint Petersburg headquarters can explain the odd and seemingly paradoxical relationship between the mercenary company and the army. So why would the Kremlin give, or sell, any of them to Wagner while Wagner directly competes with the Russian army for influence in Moscow? The T-90s are highly valuable and in short supply. That brings the total T-90 inventory down to around 360, of which at least 50 belong to Russian army battalions defending a key road around Svatove, 50 miles north of Bakhmut. And after February, it lost at least 36 of the tanks in combat with Ukrainian forces. So in fact, the Russian army had just 400 T-90s before attacking Ukraine in late February. But 200 were in storage-and in cold, wet Russia, modern tanks with their delicate optics and electronics tend to degrade fast while not in routine use. Before the current war, the Russians on paper had more than 600 T-90s. The 45-ton, three-person T-90 with its 125-millimter gun and steel-composite armor is Russia’s newest and best tank. ![]() The presence of T-90M tanks in the Wagner arsenal around Bakhmut, first reported by pro-Russia war correspondent Alexander Simonov, deepens the weirdness. Wagner pilots fly Sukhoi Su-24 and Su-25 attack jets that technically belong to the Russian air force and evidently benefit from air force logistical support. What’s weird is that the Russian military and The Wagner Group clearly have close ties. Valery Gerasimov, chief of the Russian general staff. When Wagner artillery batteries around Bakhmut ran out of ammunition, they blamed Gen. It’s apparent that Prigozhin and Russian generals are bitter rivals. But that hasn’t stopped Wagner from dedicating almost all its forces in Ukraine to the Bakhmut sector-and losing many of them in repeated, failed human-wave assaults on the town’s entrenched Ukrainian garrison.Īnalysts have surmised that Yevgeny Prigozhin, a former sausage-vendor and close associate of Russian president Vladimir Putin who now is Wagner’s chief financier, views the Bakhmut battle as an opportunity to prove Wagner’s warfighting mettle and position the firm as an alternative to regular Russian forces in the Kremlin’s military establishment. ![]()
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