In Syria, Russia chasing Chechens once again

In this photo released on Sunday, June 28, 2015, by a website of ISIL militants, an ISIL militant waves his group's flag as he and another celebrate in Fallujah, Iraq, west of Baghdad. AP Photo

While Russian President Vladimir Putin's air campaign in Syria may have other aims, one result seems to be that it is hitting Islamists from Russia's Caucasus, say analysts.
 
High on the list of places Russia appears to have targeted are positions held by the Al-Nusra Front -- an al-Qaeda associate with a high concentration of fighters from Chechnya, Dagestan and Muslim ex-Soviet nations in Central Asia.
 
Russia's entry last week into the Syrian conflict is the country's first major military engagement outside the former Soviet Union since the collapse of Communism.
 
At the weekend, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said the mission aimed at protecting Russia itself.
 
"It's better to do it abroad rather than fight terrorism inside the country," he said.
 
The presence of Islamists from the Caucasus is not the decisive factor for unleashing Russia's military might, said Syria specialist Thomas Pierret from the University of Edinburgh.
 
Even so, the presence of Chechens on the ground effectively makes it "the third round of Russian-Chechen conflict," Pierret said.
 
Moscow fought two bloody wars against Chechen separatists between 1994-96 and in the early 2000s, bringing the breakaway Russian region under the capital's control.
 
But it failed to stem the spread of an Islamist insurgency into the surrounding regions, particularly Dagestan and Ingushetia.
         
Fighters originating from the Caucasus are believed to have first appeared in Syria in summer 2012, notably at the battle of Aleppo.    

The men have a reputation for being good warriors and are dubbed "Chechens" by locals even if they come from elsewhere in the Caucasus, a region where Muslims overwhelmingly...

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