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Meet the Chechen battalion joining Ukraine to fight Russia — and fellow Chechens

Members of the volunteer Sheikh Mansur Battalion (from left) Islam, Mansur and Asadulla speak to an AFP journalist during an interview in Zaporizhzhia on June 9. The Sheikh Mansur Battalion was founded in 2014 after the annexation of Crimea and composed mainly of Chechen veterans. The group was named after a Chechen military commander against Russian expansion in the Caucasus in the 18th century.
Genya Savilov
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AFP via Getty Images
Members of the volunteer Sheikh Mansur Battalion (from left) Islam, Mansur and Asadulla speak to an AFP journalist during an interview in Zaporizhzhia on June 9. The Sheikh Mansur Battalion was founded in 2014 after the annexation of Crimea and composed mainly of Chechen veterans. The group was named after a Chechen military commander against Russian expansion in the Caucasus in the 18th century.

ZAPORIZHZHIA, Ukraine — Mansur was 13 when Russian soldiers destroyed his village of Samashki during Chechnya's first war for independence against Russia.

Wielding flamethrowers, the Russians burned Mansur's neighbors alive in their homes, threw grenades into basements and executed men. Four years later, a truce disintegrated, and Mansur was back at war. He says he was never the same after.

"Russia ruined everything I had. I grew up with war, and the war shaped me in all respects," Mansur, 40, says matter-of-factly.

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Mansur is one of more than 200,000 Chechens who fled to Turkey and Europe throughout the 2000s during a second war between Russian federal forces and fighters in Chechnya, a republic in far southern Russia.

Russian soldiers fire artillery at Chechen positions near the village of Duba-Yurt, 18 miles south of the Grozny, Chechnya, on Jan. 23, 2000.
Maxim Marmur
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AP
Russian soldiers fire artillery at Chechen positions near the village of Duba-Yurt, 18 miles south of the Grozny, Chechnya, on Jan. 23, 2000.

Leaving his home didn't mean giving up on his fight against Russia. "If I had been born in America or Canada, I wouldn't come here to Ukraine. But because Russia took everything from me, I have to resist. Nothing else matters," Mansur says.

Today, Mansur is the deputy commander of the Sheikh Mansur Battalion (no relation), one of at least two all-Chechen battalions fighting in Ukraine against Russia. These Chechens are among the 20,000 foreign fighters that the Ukrainian government estimated to have joined its forces as of early March, near the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

The Chechens say they are ready to fight Russian forces as well as against the other ethnic Chechen soldiers who have been sent to fight on behalf of Russia.

The pro-Kyiv Chechen fighters who spoke with NPR refused to disclose their numbers in Ukraine, citing security concerns, especially from Kremlin-backed Chechens. That is also why they gave only their first names or no name at all. But they do say their battalion numbers at least in the hundreds of men — all shaped by trauma and driven by hatred of Russia.

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In Ukraine, Russian soldiers have shot civilians, indiscriminately shelled schools and apartment buildings and terrorized towns and villages they have occupied. However, Chechen soldiers say they were unfazed by these horrors. They believe they have already experienced much worse.

"The tragedies of Ukraine in Bucha and Mariupol are nothing compared to what we experienced growing up. The Russians leveled our cities and villages to the ground," says a second soldier in Mansur's battalion, who was born and raised in the Chechen capital of Grozny before it was destroyed by Russian bombing in the early 2000s.

A view of Grozny after more than 22 weeks of shelling and bombardment by Russian artillery and aviation on Feb. 4, 2000. Russia's bombing took such a heavy toll on the buildings in the Chechen capital that Russian troops struggled to find an intact office for their commandant.
Dmitry Belyakov
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AP
A view of Grozny after more than 22 weeks of shelling and bombardment by Russian artillery and aviation on Feb. 4, 2000. Russia's bombing took such a heavy toll on the buildings in the Chechen capital that Russian troops struggled to find an intact office for their commandant.

Chechens have a history of clashes with Russians

Ethnic Russians and Chechens have clashed bitterly since the 18th century in periodic border conflicts. Russian imperial troops routinely plundered Chechen settlements in bloody ethnic cleanses against Chechen civilians. During Josef Stalin's rule of the Soviet Union, about 400,000 Chechens and ethnic Ingush were forcibly deported from their homeland in the North Caucasus. As many as 30% of people died from the hardship and violence of relocation, until the survivors were allowed to return to their land under Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev 13 years later.

After the disintegration of the Soviet Union, Russia brutally quashed a nascent Chechen republic. The first war for independence ended in a peace armistice, only to dissolve in 1999 after Vladimir Putin, then Russia's prime minister, spearheaded a new military campaign in Chechnya allegedly for the sake of combating terrorists. Historians now say the allegation may have been exaggerated or fabricated.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin (second from left in foreground), and Dagestani leader Magomedali Magomedov (left) visit Russian troops at a military base in the mountains of the Botlikh region, Dagestan, following Chechen attacks in Dagestan, on Aug. 27, 1999. Russian forces entered Chechnya weeks after the attacks, starting the second of two post-Soviet wars in the mostly Muslim region.
AP
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin (second from left in foreground), and Dagestani leader Magomedali Magomedov (left) visit Russian troops at a military base in the mountains of the Botlikh region, Dagestan, following Chechen attacks in Dagestan, on Aug. 27, 1999. Russian forces entered Chechnya weeks after the attacks, starting the second of two post-Soviet wars in the mostly Muslim region.

"We were always betrayed and sold," says another Chechen soldier in Mansur's battalion. He did not give his name for security reasons. "From our very first liberation and the construction of our state, no one has ever helped us and they will not help."

They can't offer howitzers; only themselves, and years of experience fighting Russians

The Chechens say they are eager to pass on know-how from this experience fighting Russia for the last 20 years to the Ukrainian army. Unlike the U.S., they say, they have no howitzers or heavy weapons to give Ukraine. They can only give their bodies. Their lives as individuals matter little, the second soldier says.

A Chechen volunteer soldier displays a patch with the flags of both the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria and Ukraine in an undisclosed location in Ukraine on July 7.
Serhiy Morgunov
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The Washington Post via Getty Images
A Chechen volunteer soldier displays a patch with the flags of both the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria and Ukraine in an undisclosed location in Ukraine on July 7.

"We lost our homeland. What more does a person have to lose? Our family or children are not important when we've lost our home, and the whole world was silent," he says.

The members of the Sheikh Mansur battalion say that matters in settling a 400-year-old blood feud, beginning in the 1700s, when Russian czars pushed into the North Caucasus where Chechens live.

"This is our dream. And we will pass this dream on from one generation to the next generations until this evil is destroyed," says the soldier.

Overall, Chechens are divided on whether to fight for or against Russia. In 2006, Moscow appointed pro-Russian leader Ramzan Kadyrov to rule Chechnya, and Kadyrov has pledged his support and loyalty to Putin and his invasion of Ukraine. Kadyrov has claimed that Chechen fighters loyal to Russia have been sent to Ukraine to fight for Putin, meaning it is entirely possible Chechens are now fighting Chechens.

Chechnya's regional leader Ramzan Kadyrov addresses servicemen attending a review of the Chechen Republic's troops and military hardware in Grozny, the capital of the Chechen Republic, Russia, on Feb. 25. Kadyrov said that the servicemen of the Chechen Republic are ready to carry out any order of the president of the country.
Musa Sadulayev
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AP
Chechnya's regional leader Ramzan Kadyrov addresses servicemen attending a review of the Chechen Republic's troops and military hardware in Grozny, the capital of the Chechen Republic, Russia, on Feb. 25. Kadyrov said that the servicemen of the Chechen Republic are ready to carry out any order of the president of the country.

No matter, says Mansur, they are playing the long game here.

"In czarist Russia, General Yermolov stole everything from us. But we survived him. Stalin died. Putin will die. We will outlive these people," he says.

He hopes he lives long enough to see 45-year-old Kadyrov perish as well.

Wherever Russia wages war in the world, Mansur says, his battalion would follow to fight it. Their only purpose in life now is to take up arms against Russia — wherever that might be.

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