Why did so many Chechens volunteer to fight against Russia in Ukraine?

A sordid past of Russian violence has thousands to Chechens to Ukraine
Russia and Chechnya have a complicated past
The First Chechen War
The Second Chechen War
The raising of Grozny
Fanning out across Europe and the Middle East
Some ended up in Ukraine
Four Chechen battalions fight for Ukraine in today's war
Why they fight
Fighting for freedom
Helping the younger generation
Russia's propoganda
Terrorists and gangsters
Some Ukrainians see Chechens as bad
Why do the Chechens still fight for Ukraine even if they're disliked by some?
Stopping Russia
They won't do to Ukraine what they did to us...
A sordid past of Russian violence has thousands to Chechens to Ukraine

When Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 it set off a series of events that eventually saw thousands of Chechen fighters join the ranks of the Ukrainian Armed Forces to fight against Russia. But why would people from a Russian republic join Moscow's enemy?

Russia and Chechnya have a complicated past

The reasons why Ukraine's Chechen fighters joined the war against Russia can be difficult to understand unless you know the complicated past between Chechnya and the Russian state, one that has been filled with a lot of violence and war similar to what's happening in Ukraine.

The First Chechen War

In 1992, Russia attempted to meddle in Chechnya’s small-scale civil war and tried to oust Dzhokhar Dudayev’s government from power. Two years later, the First Chechen War began when Russian troops entered the republic in order to restore constitutional order according to Wikipedia. 

The Second Chechen War

Russia’s first war against Chechnya ended with a ceasefire and then a peace treaty but in 1999, the newly installed Russian President Vladimir Putin sent Russian troops into Chechnya again after pro-Chechan terrorists alleged destroyed an apartment complex in Dagestan. 

The raising of Grozny

Chechnya’s capital city of Grozny was raised to the ground over the course of the war and the republic's pro-independence faction was destroyed, leading tens of thousands of Chechens to flee their homes and emigrate abroad. 

Fanning out across Europe and the Middle East

“Many of those who had fought the Russians fled abroad, fanning out across Europe and the Middle East,” wrote UnHerd’s David Patrikarakos in a February 2023 article examining the Chechen volunteers fighting for Ukraine. 

Some ended up in Ukraine

“But some were not done, and they eventually ended up in Ukraine,” Patrikarakos added that they were, “determined to keep battling Moscow wherever they could.”

Four Chechen battalions fight for Ukraine in today's war

Today the Ukrainian Armed Forces are home to five Chechen battalions, two of which—the Dzhokhar Dudayev and Sheikh Mansur Battalions—have been fighting Russians in Ukraine since the conflict started in 2014. 

Why they fight

It was while embedded in one of Ukraine’s Chechen battalions that The Guardian’s David Boffey met a 38-year-old man named Tor who explained why he and his countrymen were fighting to defend Ukraine. 

Fighting for freedom

“We are fighting for the future and we are fighting for a free future for us and for Ukraine and for the young generation,” Tor told Boffey. 

Helping the younger generation

“For us,” Tor added, “this young generation is more important than the old Soviet generation. We cannot count on the opinions of victims of Russian propaganda, and we have to say we don’t care so much.”

Russia's propoganda

The propaganda Tor was referring to was a two-decade Russian smear campaign that portrayed Chechans as inhuman barbarians to almost every former Soviet-bloc country. 

Terrorists and gangsters

Tor recounted a story where one Ukrainian said he was happy Chechens were there fighting Russia, but the person still considered them all to be “terrorists and gangsters.”

Some Ukrainians see Chechens as bad

The perception of Chechens in Ukraine was “very bad” according to Tor. But that wasn't going to stop him from fighting the Russians. Which begs the question: Why?

Why do the Chechens still fight for Ukraine even if they're disliked by some?

In order to understand why some Chechans would fight for people who have fallen for Russia’s propaganda about them, it’s important to hear from those doing the fighting. 

Stopping Russia

When UnHerd’s David Patrikarakos asked a Chechen fighter named Kazbek why he was risking his life in Ukraine, Kazbek said it was to stop Russia from destroying Ukraine like they destroyed Chechnya. 

They won't do to Ukraine what they did to us...

“I am here in Ukraine fighting because first, the Russians came to my motherland, Chechnya,” Kazbeck said. “Now they want to do here what they did to us.”

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