KEY POINTS
  • A weekend of mayhem has left observers of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine questioning what could happen next.
  • It comes after an extraordinary 24-hour period posed what many regard as the greatest challenge to Russian President Vladimir Putin's grip on power in his more than two decades of rule.
  • "The fact that, apparently, Prigozhin is now out of [the war] and maybe Wagner is also out of it will weaken Russia's performance on the battlefield," Tony Brenton told CNBC's "Street Signs Europe" on Monday.
A Ukrainian police officer walks past a 24-storey building partially destroyed following a Russian missiles strike in Kyiv early on June 24, 2023.

Ukrainian forces can look to take advantage of the Wagner Group's short-lived armed rebellion, analysts said, with confusion among Russia's military leadership expected to considerably weaken their war effort.

A weekend of mayhem has left observers of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine questioning what could happen next. The extraordinary 24-hour period posed what many regard as the greatest challenge to Russian President Vladimir Putin's grip on power in his more than two decades of rule.