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Death Is Our Business

Russian Mercenaries and the New Era of Private Warfare

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"Extraordinary. . . Essential reading for understanding Russia and modern warfare."-CHRIS MILLER, New York Times bestselling author of Chip War and Putinomics

"John Lechner is an amazingly bold reporter who has been to the key places where the Wagner Group fought, interviewing members, veterans, and victims to deliver a shrewd, granular sense of how Russian mercenary forces operate."-ADAM HOCHSCHILD, bestselling author of King Leopold's Ghost

The shocking inside story of how the Wagner Group made private military companies inextricable from Russia's anti-Western foreign strategy.

In 2014, a well-trained, mysterious band of mercenaries arrived in Ukraine, part of Russia's first attempt to claim the country as its own. Upon ceasefire, the "Wagner Group" faded back into shadow, only to reemerge in the Middle East, where they'd go toe-to-toe with the U.S., and in Africa, where they'd earn praise for "tough measures" against insurgencies yet spark outrage for looting, torture, and civilian deaths. As Russia gained a foothold of influence abroad, Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin, known as "Putin's Chef," went from caterer to commander to single greatest threat Putin has faced in his over-twenty-year rule.

Dually armed with military and strategic prowess, the Wagner Group created a new market in a vast geopolitical landscape increasingly receptive to the promises of private actors. In this trailblazing account of the Group's origins and operations, John Lechner-the only journalist to report across its many warzones-brings us on the ground to witness Wagner partner with fragile nation states, score access to natural resources, oust peacekeeping missions, and cash in on conflicts reframed as Kremlin interests. After rebelling, Prigozhin faced an epic demise-but Wagner lives on, its political, business, and military ventures a pillar of Russian operations the world over.

Featuring exclusive interviews with over thirty Wagner Group members, Death Is Our Business is the terrifying true tale of the renegade militia that proved global instability is nothing if not an opportunity.
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    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2025
      Account of the rise of the Wagner Group and other private armies fighting Russia's war in Ukraine--and many other conflicts. Lechner, a journalist specializing in Africa, notes that Russian proxies have been popping up all over the continent in places like Mali, the Central African Republic, and Niger, propping up strongmen here and overthrowing them there. These private armies, he writes, are hardly new, having been a fixture of the medieval battlefield and enjoying a resurgence "when European powers competed to carve up the world." During World War II, Stalin freed prisoners from the Gulag and placed them in the worst sectors of the front to redeem themselves by dying for the motherland. Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of the Wagner Group of mercenaries, borrowed a page from Stalin, using the same promise: "Prigozhin, or one of his representatives, visited every minimum- and maximum-security colony except for those in Chechnya and the far-eastern region of Kamchatka." Survive six months of the Ukrainian war, Wagner promised the prisoners, and you'd be sprung with a clean record and a pocketful of cash--and so it is that the ranks of Russia's fighters in Ukraine have swelled with soldiers who have no stake in the war except to survive. Prigozhin fell afoul of Vladimir Putin and died in a mysterious 2023 plane crash that was no mystery at all: "Every member of Wagner, every Russian citizen, and the rest of the world were convinced the Russian state had assassinated Prigozhin." Though largely absorbed within the regular Russian army, Wagner fights on, and it's not alone; as Lechner writes in this eye-opening expos�, "the world is filled with Prigozhins." For those who want to know the ugly truth of war fought for rubles--or dollars.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2025
      What is worse than an ambitious, amoral oligarch with a chip on his shoulder? One with a private army at his command. Yevgeny Prigozhin, former head of the Wagner Group, intrepid reporter Lechner writes, was a contemporary representative of an old profession, a commander of bloodthirsty mercenaries ready to ply their trade for anyone willing to pay them. In this in-depth, beautifully written chronicle and analysis of atrocities, massacres, war crimes, and theft on a scale scarcely to be believed, Lechner illuminates Prigozhin's Wagner PMC (Private Military Company), drawing on his extensive interviews with members, and its trail of devastation across Ukraine, Syria, and Africa. He also delves deeply into the history of Russia, the rise of Vladimir Putin and Prigozhin, and the lesser and greater conflicts across much of the globe in which Wagner has protected dictators and fought on their behalf. While the book ends with Wagner's aborted mutiny and its founders' deaths in a plane crash, Lechner intimates that mercenaries and private wars are here to stay. An invaluable look at a very dark dimension in geopolitical affairs.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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