The Tangled, Mercenary Network of ‘Putin’s Chef’ Is Startling to Unravel
Article/Op-Ed in World Politics Review

Sasa Dzambic Photography / Shutterstock
Oct. 4, 2019
Candace Rondeaux authored an article for World Politics Review on the unraveling of the mercenary network of 'Putin's Chef.'
Three years ago, Yevgeny Prigozhin barely registered a blip on Google trends in English or Russian. Today, the Kremlin-connected businessman better known as “Putin’s chef” is persona non grata in many places around the world, including the United States, where the Treasury Department leveled another round of sanctions against Prigozhin this week for his role in Russia’s interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections.
Although Prigozhin’s close ties to President Vladimir Putin have long been known to Russian observers, stretching back to their younger days in St. Petersburg in the 1990s, the Kremlin insider was virtually unknown in the United States until recently. Now, Prigozhin ranks as one of the most visible targets of the U.S. response to Russian election interference. The private jets and yachts that Prigozhin has used to shuttle from one warzone business deal to the next are now effectively barred from landing in any port that trades with the United States.