HomeNewsOpinionWagner cost Russia suspiciously little money

Wagner cost Russia suspiciously little money

If Putin’s defense spending numbers are correct, it’s likely that Prigozhin overstated the size of his army

July 04, 2023 / 17:34 IST
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Yevgeny Prigozhin
Wagner Group boss Yevgeny Prigozhin.

In the aftermath of the failed mutiny by the Wagner Group mercenary army and its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, dissatisfaction with Russia’s military and political leadership will continue to brew with the fighting in Ukraine. As more details become available about Wagner — until recently, the best-equipped, always regularly paid part of the Russian invasion force —
officers and soldiers alike will wonder why their units often need to rely on public collections for vital equipment and why their pay is often delayed or reduced.

Vladimir Putin’s Russia is known for its ability to fight wars on a relatively small budget. The war in Ukraine is no exception. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Russia’s military spending was about 4.4 percent of gross domestic product in 2022 and should not exceed that by much this year. Israel spent 4.5 percent of its GDP on defense last year.

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The headline number doesn’t include indirect war-related outlays, such as on construction in occupied areas and in Russian border regions damaged by Ukrainian shelling. But it’s a manageable amount. SIPRI has this to say in a report published last week: "For Ukraine, it is without question a full-scale war for the country’s very existence as an independent state. But Russia has been engaged in the conflict in a more limited manner, as if seeking to minimise its economic cost and the impact on domestic society and on the president’s goals for the country. It is being fought in reality not with the resources of a full-scale war but indeed as a more limited military operation... it is an operation being fought in monetary terms at a cost that the Russian economy can afford, notwithstanding severe sanctions."

The low financial cost of the war may be a major reason why Putin appears to believe that time is on his side and why he isn’t actively seeking peace in Ukraine. However, the tight budget appears to have been spent rather inefficiently compared with how Wagner put to use its government funding.