Bloomberg,
which picked up on the unexpected public comments, wrote: "Russian
President Vladimir Putin said pieces of grenade were found in the bodies
of Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin and other mercenary leaders who
died in a plane crash, as he hinted that the man who led an armed revolt
against the Kremlin’s military leadership had been a drug user."
Putin claims Prigozhin’s plane crashed because the Wagner leadership got drunk and/or high, then set off hand grenades during the flight.
— max seddon (@maxseddon) October 5, 2023
Seems legit, definitely no further questions about that incident, we can all move on pic.twitter.com/JeM8ljlibi
Putin said, "In the bodies of those who died in the air crash fragments of hand grenades were found."
The Russian leader expressed regret that toxicology tests weren't conducted on the recovered bodies at the crash site, as they "found not only $10 million in cash, but 5 kilograms of cocaine" in a subsequent raid on Wagner PMC's main offices in St. Petersburg.
In total 10 passengers as well as crew were killed aboard the Embraer SA Legacy 600 private jet. US sources have speculated it was likely a bomb that was placed on the plane, and detonated midair. There's also the Russian shootdown theory, ordered by either Putin or the military as 'revenge' for the June Wagner mutiny.
Broadly, Western sources have viewed the whole killing as an assassination ordered by Putin himself, but which the Kremlin has denied as an "absolute lie".
But
given the nonchalant and casual way Putin just told an audience of top
Russian officials that it boils down to irresponsible mercenaries
getting drunk and high and deciding to play games with hand grenades, it
seems Putin could simply be openly taunting his enemies here. Is he trolling?
BREAKING: Russian President Vladimir Putin has said that fragments of hand grenades were found in the bodies of the victims of a plane crash in August that killed former Wagner boss Yevgeny
— Sky News (@SkyNews) October 5, 2023
Prigozhin.https://t.co/QYEclXw6pC
📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602, Freeview 233 and YouTube pic.twitter.com/KyIVTxE0LC
The Thursday comments on Prigozhin's death were widely reported in international headlines soon after Putin saying them. It came during a lengthy Q&A session with the Russian leader, as is typical of the Valdai format. Putin certainly knows US and European press and officials closely watch and monitor his words at these events.
(Article by Tyler Durden republished from ZeroHedge.com)