Is Chechnya preparing for a bloody succession battle? According to reports, Ramzan Kadyrov, the ruthless leader of Russia’s Chechnya region, is suffering from a fatal pancreas condition. Although rumours about his health have cropped up repeatedly in recent years, this time things do not look good. Neither the Kremlin nor its counterpart in Grozny have been able to dispel the sense that Chechnya may be about to face a turning point — one that may provide an opportunity for Vladimir Putin’s opponents to get the better of Russia in Ukraine.
Chechnya has for two centuries been a thorn in imperial Moscow’s side. Over and over again, its people have revolted against the imposition of Christian Orthodox power and dragged Russia into protracted and bloody conflicts. The first of these post-Soviet conflicts, which ran from 1994 to 1996, saw Russian troops humiliated. Boris Yeltsin, who had staked his reputation on reasserting control over the region, saw his reputation permanently damaged. Worse, Russians themselves were humbled. A decade earlier, they had been vying for global supremacy with Washington. Now, they could not even win a war against a separatist rabble in their own backyard.
When in late 1999 Putin, then a young and straight-talking upstart, stormed into the halls of power, he promised to bring Chechnya back into the fold at any cost. Launching a new war, he sent his troops into the breakaway region with carte blanche to exterminate and destroy. Almost a decade of fighting left more than 50,000 civilians dead and Grozny razed. Widespread criminality — looting, rape and murder — by Russian troops at the front went mostly unpunished.
Into this maelstrom of violence stepped a young Ramzan Kadyrov, one of many former insurgents turned pro-Russian fighters. Appointed by Putin to lead the territory in 2007, his 17 years in power have been characterised by an awkward combination of Moscow-style autocracy, with various strongmen vying for favour while Kadyrov watches on, and regressive Islamism, designed through a combination of misogynism, traditionalist flourishes and militancy to appease and oppress the majority Muslim local population in equal measure.
But above all, Kadyrov has ruled in the same style as the Russian army conducted its invasion: with criminality and absolute violence. Kadyrov and his henchmen have personally been involved in torture and extrajudicial killings of political opponents and purported criminals. Brutal anti-gay purges have seen hundreds abducted, tortured and beaten — and several killed. Putin and his ally seemed to have found a solution to the age-old problem of Chechen insurgency: a flexible nationalism, ruthless violence and a mafia-like internal politics.
Imagining a post-Kadyrov Chechnya, pundits float bold hypotheses: could Kadyrov’s death provoke a bitter succession crisis that would spark another regional war? If Russian troops had to be deployed, would Putin’s reputation as the man who quelled the restive Chechens for good be ruined? Could rebellion in Chechnya even lead to a wave of revolts across the imperial peripheries, where Muslim minorities have not profited from the past two decades like their ethnic Russian peers and where local populations have borne much of the burden of fighting in Ukraine? If the wrong leader is imposed by Moscow, could demonstrations like those in Bashkortostan — another Muslim majority province where in January several thousand angry locals clashed with security services after a local activist was jailed — break out and perhaps spread? Both Kadyrov and Putin have plans in place to ensure that such disasters don’t unfold, but the situation is flammable.
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SubscribeYeah I know Chechnya is a geopolitical powder keg and complete mess. Honestly though this reads as nothing more than hopeful whining now that predictions of Russian regime change and Ukrainian battlefield victory have proven to be laughably short sighted.
I’m not sure that any of this will lead to significant problems for Russia, but anything at all that leads to any problems for Russia is a good thing, surely?
Sure, but could have bad consequences for us as well. Chechen extremists don’t always stay in Checnya – they come to Europe (see France and Samuel Paty killing) and USA (boston marathon) and commit terrorist attacks there
Surely things were better before when Europe was allowed to do business with Russia? For those in Europe certainly. For the US too although they thought they could do better. Only the Russians seem to be doing better now that they rely on themselves than they did before when they traded more with us. So, watch out what you wish for.
Horrible “realpolitik” article which basically uses the Chechens who suffered a pretty brutal war within living memory as a pawn for the West’s interests. The casualties would be terrible now Russia knows what to do to stop terrorists (i.e. dont give a monkeys about civilian deaths). There is no hope of a Chechen victory. It would be less likely than in Ukraine as we couldn’t plausibly send weapons to them in the same way.
Don’t worry. Chechens have enough Russian weapons
Some Russian weapons are good (AK47s). Some Russian weapons are not so good (its tanks).
I doubt that Russia has “given a monkeys” about civilian deaths (including those of its own civilians) at any point in its history.
I sort of agree but then everyone was like that back in the day pretty much. What is different now is that the Russians have learnt that actually trying to kill civilians is the way to destroy insurgencies. They didn’t do it in Afghanistan and lost but did it in Chechnya and (helping their proxies) in Syria and won. The equation is simple – civilian destruction brings insurgents to their knees. The West’s “hearts and minds” approach is a stop gap at best.
Maybe, but Russians have always been at the front of the pack when it comes to committing war crimes.
Far behind the US now and the British before. Far behind.
So you say Boris.
Pretty sure plenty of innocent Afghan civilians got killed by the Russians.
But what you appear to be saying is that the Russians have figured out that committing war crimes – deliberate slaughter of civilians – is they way forward here. Did I get that right ?
And you seem to imply that this is “progress”.
Is this a strategy you think we should have followed in Northern Ireland ? Or Israel today in Gaza ?
Afghanistan – minimum 600.000 victims
Mainly a direct and indirect result of Islamists recruited and formed by Washington.
What governments do?
It’s nothing to do with the West !!!
The Caucasus doesn’t need any help from us. Ethnic and tribal feuding is what they do best in that region. Fortunately a field in which we have little expertise (so far …).
If you have any actual evidence of the West intervening in Chechnya, please do give it. I’ve never seen any.
The West has clearly intervened in some places where it would have done better to stay out. I don’t see us ever being stupid enough to poke the Caucasus though. Leave the mess to the Russians.
Start with Brezhinskys autobiography. He brags about it
The final paragraph of this piece is chilling in the way that it blandly discusses the prospects of fermenting another catastrophic war. I’m sure the author wishes to remain analytical, dispassionate and all that, but it reads as borderline sociopathic.
Garner states without moral comment that the unleashing of another conflict would be an acceptable policy proposition if it could save an unspecified number of Ukrainian lives. There doesn’t appear to be any grounding to this moral equation that goes much further than ‘because Putin’.
Otherwise this piece does seem to be doing some ground-work for another little regime change operation – typically framing the local power as despotic and brutal. All of which may be true, but then again I wonder which of these cities the author may feel safer strolling around in right now: Baghdad, Damascus, Kabul, Tripoli or Grozny.
There’s a porous “borderline” between Machiavellian “realpolitik” and sociopathy.
They will fight amongst themselves anyway. That’s what happens when a warlord dictator dies and there’s a power vacuum. Nothing we do – or do not do – will make any difference to that.
There is no need – and no sense – in us getting involved. Leave this particular **** show to the Russians. They broke it. They can clean it up.
Or New York City, it comes to that.
My thoughts exactly. Nobody of sense and compassion could seriously want Chechnya to descend back into the violent hell it used to be, just because it might help the West in its desire to defeat Russia in Ukraine? I mean, we’re already doing that by treating Ukrainians themselves as nothing more than a numbers game, which is bad enough without deciding that we can chuck another country on the bonfire too.
Don’t get me wrong: I support Ukraine and think the West should do more to assist its campaign against Russian aggression. But really, it’s enough of a mess as it is without this new nonsense.
You read about the Kadyrov regime and just further understand why Ukraine fights. That’s the sort of society they’d end up with too. And thus why we must support them
Whatever happens with Chechnya, can we please stop with this fantasy: “one that may provide an opportunity for Vladimir Putin’s opponents to get the better of Russia in Ukraine.” ——-> A half-million or more Ukrainians are already dead and the country is a mess. We, the West, have done quite enough in pursuing this wholly avoidable conflict.
All Russia’s opponents need to do is fuel the ambitions of Kadyrov’s potential successors and encourage them to plot and commit violence against one another. ——-> Is this supposed to be an example of claiming the moral high ground, encouraging people to kill each other? Seriously? This obsession with Russia while the West implodes is quite the distraction. People like the author are rather cavalier about the lives of other people
Rather like Imperial Germany fantasising that Mexico could join the Central Powers and attack the USA.
Is this all the West has left? Destroy one territory in order to save another? Acting like Guy Fawkes and using the lives of the Chechens as gunpowder. And, notably, hoping that religious divisions can be exploited; something that would be condemned in the UK or the USA.
Kadyrov outlasted Susan Sontag. Just sayin’
Fifty years ago, Brezhinsky bought into Bernard Lewis’s idea of recruiting and forming Islamists to nibble at the Soviet Union and they’ve kept at it since even after 9:11 showed there can be blowback. In a misplaced tribute act to Mackinder, US neocons carry on to keep Europe and Russia apart whatever the cost even though Bush, Burns and Schroeder showed it was possible to do business wirh Putin. Good business. Too good for some, apparently.