joining us now, peter bergen and beth sander, both cnn national security analysts. ral has called this a coup. his word, a coup. prigozhin says it's not a coup but what he calls a march for justice in russia. putin likened what he now faces to the russian revolution back in 1917. so how significant is it? and how worried do you think putin is right now? wolf, i think he' s very worrie. he is an adept student of russian history and knows fully well the most difficult thing to do is lose a russian war, and 1989, two years later, you have the end of the soviet union, these things are linked, you think of the 1905 russian/japanese war, which the russians lost to the japanese and then in 1917, they were losing in world war one, and this leads to mutinies, a familiar term here, which lead to the collapse of the romanoff empire. so i think putin in his speech addressing these issues mentioned the 1917 revolution, not for the first time he re-wrote a history in the back saying there was a stab in the back and that's why the russians lost. no, the russians lost because of the