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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Count Dooku profile
2006-01-10
From a (sorta) pro-Chechen source, but still some good info.
While warlord Shamil Basaev dominates the headlines of the Chechen conflict, a lesser-known guerrilla leader has worked his way into a crucial position in the Chechen leadership. Dokku Umarov was appointed vice-president in the new administration of President Abdul-Khalim Sadulaev in June 2005. A native of southwestern Chechnya, the 40-year-old Emir has already been entrusted with the command of several fronts beyond his original post in the southwestern sector. Russian Deputy Prosecutor General Nikolai Shepel noted as recently as last July that the northern district "is controlled by Umarov."

A veteran of the 1994-96 war, Umarov served as security minister in Aslan Maskhadov's postwar government. Umarov began the current war in 1999 as a field commander working closely with warlord Ruslan Gelaev. After the dual disasters of the evacuation of Grozny and the battle of Komsomolskoe in early 2000, Umarov and Gelaev crossed the mountains into the Pankisi Gorge of Georgia, where they rebuilt their commands. Georgian intelligence reported Umarov leading 130-150 fighters in the Gorge before his return to Chechnya in the summer of 2002 (Civil Georgia, January 20, 2003). Gelaev gave Umarov several Strela missiles, which Umarov's forces used to good effect against Russian helicopters in the fighting around Shatoi in 2003 (Chechenpress, December 4, 2002).

Gelaev was killed in February 2004 after a disastrous attempt to lead a group of fighters over the mountains of Dagestan into Georgia. After Gelaev's death, many of his men joined Umarov's command. Russian security services created a scenario based on the alleged testimony of a prisoner (Baudi Khadzhiev) in which Umarov urged Gelaev to undertake an operation in Dagestan that he knew would be fatal in order to take over Gelaev's command. The allegation was part of a long tradition of Russian reports about feuding commanders and dissension in the Chechen ranks. Gelaev's family was quick to point out that their clan and the Umarov family are closely related (an important consideration in clan-conscious Chechnya).

In early February of this year, Russian security suggested that Umarov and Basaev were arranging a meeting of Chechen and Arab field commanders in Grozny to mark the one-year anniversary of Gelaev's death (Vremya no. 16, February 2, 2005). Later in the month Maj.-Gen. Ilya Shabalkin, spokesman for the Russian command in the North Caucasus, claimed that Russian special forces had destroyed three units of Umarov's command on their way to Azerbaijan to wipe out Gelaev's family at a ceremony marking the first anniversary of Gelaev's death. The family's alleged declaration of blood vengeance against Umarov provided the motive. The details of this unlikely plot came from the interrogation of a mortally wounded Chechen (RIA Novosti, February 25, 2005). Several Ingush clans have also been reported as having declared blood vengeance against Umarov as a result of deaths suffered in the Nazran operation of 2004.

Like most Chechen field commanders, Umarov has been declared dead on several occasions. In the last year Russian forces have intensified their efforts to eliminate him. In January 2005, he was reported killed in a gun battle with Russian commandos near the Georgian border. In March, Umarov was reported as having been seriously wounded by a spetsnaz assassination team. After stepping on a landmine sometime later, Umarov was reported to have lost a leg, but was only injured. In April, Russian special forces destroyed a small guerrilla unit in a seven–hour battle in Grozny after receiving intelligence that Umarov was with them, but he was not found among the dead.

Umarov struck back in an attack on Roshni-Chu in August, but in September the Russian Interior Ministry declared victory over Umarov's fighters, finding Umarov's "grave" in the process. In October, Umarov was again reported dead in the raid on Nalchik. In a new tactic designed to put pressure on resistance leaders, masked men in uniform abducted Umarov's father, brother, wife and baby. Umarov believes those responsible are members of the "Oil Regiment," a notorious loyalist unit better known for kidnappings than its nominal mission of guarding pipelines.

Chechen Duma Deputy Ruslan Yamadaev suggests that Umarov is currently part of Basaev's "terrorist wing" of the Chechen resistance, but Umarov distanced himself from Basaev after the latter claimed responsibility for the Beslan outrage (Interfax, March 9, 2005). Only a few months earlier, Umarov had played a leading role with Basaev in organizing the military assault on Nazran in Ingushetia (June 21-22, 2004). Umarov firmly refuted the value of terrorist attacks such as Beslan: "In the eyes of the resistance such operations have no legitimacy," he said. "We ourselves were horrified by what they did in Beslan" (RFE/RL, July 28, 2005). During the crisis Umarov was repeatedly identified by security services as the leader of the Beslan hostage-takers, a claim that has never been substantiated in any fashion. Umarov emphasized the military nature of his own war: "Our targets—these are the Russian occupation forces, their bases, command HQ's, and also their armed servicemen from the numbers of local collaborationists, who pursue and who kill peaceful Muslims. We will attack, where we think it's necessary. Civil objects and innocent civilians are not our targets" (Kavkaz Centre, July 1, 2004).
I think they're being a little too credulous of Doku here.
In May 2005 , Maj. Gen. Shabalkin accused Umarov of joining warlord Shamil Basaev and President Sadulaev in planning a suicide truck-bombing in Grozny. The trio were also said to be planning large-scale civilian massacres in several towns of the North Caucasus by using cyanide "in highly populated areas, key installations and in reservoirs." A Jordanian emissary of both al-Qaeda and the Muslim Brotherhood allegedly provided the cyanide. Proof of the plot was provided in the form of a photo of a Russian in a white lab-coat holding a vial of clear liquid, identified as cyanide. The strategic advantage the Chechen leadership might hope to gain through committing such outrageous atrocities remains unexplained. The allegations came at the same time Sadulaev was trying in his public statements to distance the resistance from terrorist methods.
Um, no offense but you could sorta say the same thing about Beslan or the 2002 theater hostage seige. That didn't stop Basayev from doing it ...
Four days after Shabalkin made these allegations, Umarov responded by promising large-scale military activities within Russia before the end of the year. This promise seems to have been fulfilled by the October raid in Nalchik, in which Umarov played a leading role (Chechenpress, May 9, 2005).

Umarov is one of the last veteran commanders from the 1994-96 Chechen-Russian war still alive and active in the fighting. He bears the scars and limp of multiple wounds, but his commitment to the conflict remains inflexible. He regards death in battle as an inevitability, and has publicly expressed his hope that those Chechen men who have not fully participated in the war "will all burn in the fire of Hell!" Although Umarov admits he has grown much closer to Islam during the last decade of conflict, he is openly scornful of suggestions that he is a "Wahhabi" or radical Islamist: "I have a whole [military] front," he said. "I go along that front and I don't see people fighting to bring the world Wahhabism or terror" (RFE/RL, July 28, 2005). It is unlikely that Umarov's new role as vice-president will interfere with his ongoing military operations. These days there is not a great deal of paperwork to do in the resistance government. Nevertheless, the appointment was hardly symbolic, considering the record of three successive violent deaths of Chechen presidents (four including the Russian-backed presidency of Akhmad Kadyrov). In the volatile and dangerous world of Chechen politics, Dokku Umarov now stands next in line for the leadership of the Chechen resistance, barring renewed aspirations for this role by Shamil Basaev.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Dead Chechen Arab was Zarqawi's cousin
2005-05-19
Cue "It's a Family Affair" theme ...
A series of special operations that have been conducted in Chechnya have shown that guerillas acting in the republic have not only financial and ideological but also blood relations with international terrorist organizations, spokesman for the federal forces in the North Caucasus Maj. Gen. Ilya Shabalkin told Interfax on Thursday.
Just one big happy "family".
For instance, prominent terrorist Jarah, who was recently killed in Dagestan, represented al Qaeda in Chechnya, Shabalkin said. According to information gathered by law enforcement agencies, Jarah's older brother belongs to Osama bin Laden's inner circle, and Jarah himself was a cousin of Jordanian terrorist and al Qaeda's emissary in Iraq Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Shabalkin said.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Amanat leader killed
2005-05-18
Russian security services killed a prominent Chechen rebel wanted for involvement in a series of planned chemical attacks, a top spokesperson for Russian forces in Chechnya said on Tuesday.

Major general Ilya Shabalkin identified the dead rebel leader as Alash Daudov, a former police official who was also accused of complicity in the seizure of hostages at a Moscow theatre in 2002 and a school in Beslan last September, as well as attacks on police in Grozny and in neighbouring Ingushetia in 2004.

Shabalkin said Daudov and a Jordanian militant, Abu Mudjaid, were planning "a series of terrorist acts using strong poisons". He said Daudov was supposed to carry out attacks under orders from Abu Mudjaid, who allegedly organised a shipment of toxic substances from outside Russia to Chechnya.

Shabalkin said Daudov was among three alleged militants killed in an abandoned house on the southern outskirts of Grozny after they tried to flee and opened fire on security services raiding the building. He said investigators earlier had found an unspecified amount of toxic substances, including cyanide. He appeared to be referring to a cache containing a cyanide-based substance that the federal security service (FSB) said earlier this month had been discovered in a settlement on the Chechnya-Ingushetia border. It said the components were not produced in Russia or elsewhere in the former Soviet Union.

Shabalkin said Daudov headed the so-called Amanat jamaat, a group of adherents to the extremist Wahhabi branch of Islam. The FSB had said it had implicated the group in planning attacks using poisons and toxic substances to contaminate water supplies and crowded places in the capitals of the North Caucasus region and several large regional centres elsewhere in Russia. According to Russian news agencies, Shabalkin said Daudov had been the second-ranking rebel leader in Chechnya, after warlord Shamil Basayev.

Shabalkin said Daudov had been carrying a sketch of a makeshift radio-controlled bomb, as well as maps of Grozny and the Caucasus cities of Nazran and Nalchik, which investigators believe indicated potential targets including water supplies, grain elevators and markets. Shabalkin said an electronic device for uncovering listening devices had been found amongst Daudov's things. He said experts had concluded the device that was produced on an "extremist base" in an Arab country he did not identify.

Shabalkin said that found, was "the latest evidence of involvement by the intelligence services of certain states" that were acting against Russia, but he did not name any nations. He claimed foreign intelligence agencies helped militants in Chechnya with security and equipment and help them organise sophisticated terror attacks.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Dead Arab was Kuwaiti al-Qaeda member
2005-05-18
Russian authorities said today a Kuwaiti militant who was an al Qaida emissary to Chechnya has been killed by security forces in a neighbouring region, the second statement in as many days linking foreigners to Chechen rebels.

The alleged militant, who went by the single name Jarah, was killed on Tuesday evening along with another suspect during an operation near the Chechen border in Dagestan, said Major General Ilya Shabalkin, the spokesman for the Russian campaign against rebels in Chechnya and surrounding areas.

In a statement, Shabalkin said Jarah was an al Qaida emissary in Chechnya and has close connections with members of the Muslim Brotherhood, an outlawed Egyptian Islamic movement, and of Al-Haramain, a Saudi Charity that the kingdom's government dissolved last year amid US suspicion that it was bankrolling al Qaida.

He said Jarah had been a middleman for the funding of Chechen rebels by foreign terror groups and had helped top rebel leaders — Shamil Basayev and Aslan Maskhadov, who was killed earlier this year — to organise "many large terrorist acts." He did not name any specific attacks Jarah allegedly helped plan.

Russia authorities say Chechen rebels, fighting their second separatist war in a decade, have been financed by Islamic terrorist groups abroad and that many Arab mercenaries have fought alongside the rebels in the mountainous southern region, in some cases leading groups of militants.

According to Shabalkin, whose claims could not be independently confirmed, Jarah received training in Taliban terror camps and was adept at preparing bombs and poisons. He said that Jarah had spent "a long period of time" in the Pankisi Gorge, a region near Chechnya in neighbouring Georgia, and in Azerbaijan.

While in Georgia and Azerbaijan, he said the Kuwaiti citizen and unidentified associates received large amounts of money from "foreign terrorist centres" and sent it along to Russia's North Caucasus region, which includes Chechnya.

Jarah also frequently entered Chechnya, where he moved with rebel groups under Basayev and took part in terror and other attacks, trained militants in explosives and taught them extremist Muslim ideology, Shabalkin said. He was also involved in training female suicide bombers, Shabalkin's statement said.

On Tuesday, Shabalkin had announced Russian security forces killed a prominent Chechen rebel he accused of planning chemical attacks. He said the rebel was supposed to carry out the attacks under orders from a Jordanian militant, Abu Mudjaid, who allegedly organised a shipment of toxic substances to Chechnya from abroad.

Authorities in Chechnya say many attacks there have been carried out by militants entering from Dagestan, the restive region where Shabalkin said Jarah was killed.

Russian and regional officials met today to discuss plans to base a Russian military unit in Dagestan's Botlikh district, an area near the Chechen border where rebels seized villages in 1999 fighting that was one of the catalysts for the Kremlin's decision to send troops into Chechnya that year, starting the second war.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Pro-Chechen Arab fighter killed near Chechnya
2005-05-18
On the heels of Vakha Arsanov collecting his raisins, this is a good week for the FSB.
MOSCOW - Russian forces have killed an Arab fighting alongside Chechen rebels, the spokesman for the Russian forces in the North Caucasus, Major Ilya Shabalkin said late Tuesday.
Ilya was actually a major general the last time I looked...
"The operation was conducted by the Federal Security Service and several interior ministry officers," Shabalkin was quoted by the Russian news agencies as saying. In the course of the operation, which was carried out in the Russian Caucasus republic of Dagestan bordering Chechnya, Russian forces also killed another rebel, who has not yet been identified, Shabalkin said.
"Who's that, Volodya?"
"Just some dead guy."
The press center for Russian forces in the North Caucasus said in a later statement that man, Jarah, was a Kuwaiti national aged about 30, and that he was killed in the town of Solnechnoye, Interfax reported. The statement described Jarah as an Al-Qaeda emissary in Chechnya. Shabalkin said Jarah arrived in Chechnya between 1995 and 1997, together with feared Arab warlord Khattab, whom the FSB killed in 2002. Russian forces in Chechnya announced earlier Tuesday they had killed Alash Daudov, a top rebel leader, along with two other Chechen fighters, in the suburbs of Chechen capital Grozny.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Russia kills 40 hard boys during VE Day celebration
2005-05-12
Russian troops killed up to 40 Chechen rebels in counter-terrorist operations in the Caucasus while Moscow hosted world leaders for celebrations marking victory in World War Two, an army spokesman said on Thursday. Fearing a repeat of Chechen attacks aimed at past May 9 Victory Day parades, authorities introduced tough security measures across Russia before the arrival of more than 50 heads of state, including U.S. President George W. Bush. But army spokesman General Ilya Shabalkin denied any link between the Moscow events and the Chechnya security operation, which ran from May 5 to May 10. "The special operation was not linked to Victory Day festivities. It was a number of local special operations, mainly in mountainous regions," he said by telephone. "We are searching for rebels and we kill those who show resistance."

The three days of summitry and ceremony passed smoothly in the Russian capital -- much of which was sealed off to the public -- and the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany was marked across the country without the bloodshed of previous years. A bombing in a Grozny stadium on May 9 last year killed the Moscow-backed leader of Chechnya and six others, while a bombing on the same day in 2002 in the neighbouring region of Dagestan killed 45 people.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Amanat member arrested
2005-05-08
Federal Security Service (FSB) operatives and those of the Chechen republican interior ministry arrested Ruslan Arsanukayev and his accomplices, who wanted to stage a terrorist act against top Chechen leaders. This was disclosed to RIA Novosti today at the regional command center for supervising the North Caucasian counter-terrorist operation.

Arsanukayev, a native of the republic's Grozny district, was arrested in Staraya Sunzha. According to the regional command center, Arsanukayev is a member of the Amanat (Silence) terrorist cell, which wanted to blow up the republican-government building in Grozny on May 9.

Arsanukayev was ordered to perpetrate this terrorist act by Elmuradov, who coordinates and finances terrorist activity. Elmuradov himself reports to Saidullayev, the so-called successor to Aslan Maskhadov.

Talking to RIA Novosti, Maj.-Gen. Ilya Shabalkin, spokesman for the afore-said regional command center, noted that Arsanukayev had confessed. According to Shabalkin, his testimony will also interest some foreign secret services. Several other members of the Amanat terrorist cell were also arrested, Shabalkin added. Shabalkin declined to specify their number in the interests of investigation. FSB operatives are now questioning them.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Would-be boomer babe killed in Grozny
2005-05-08
A female suicide bomber who was trying to blow up police headquarters in Grozny, the Chechen capital, was killed Friday night.

"The woman suicide bomber found and destroyed by servicemen from the Akhmed Kadyrov special task regiment, had planned to blow up the police headquarters in the Staropromyslovsky district of Grozny," Itar-Tass quoting police said today.

"In the first hours of the investigation, we found out that the woman suicide bomber carrying a so-called Shahid's belt planned to enter the police headquarters and blow herself up," police said adding that the search for the woman's accomplices was going on in Grozny.

Before killing the woman, police had asked her to surrender and remove the belt with explosives from her body, but she refused and threatened to blow herself up, after which she was killed. No one however, was injured in the explosion.

This was the third woman suicide bomber killed in Chechnya in the last two days.

On Thursday, police killed two women suicide bombers and two field commanders in the village of Sernovoskoye. They were supposed to drive a Kamaz truck carrying more than 1.2 tons of explosives. Police, however, seized the truck.

The spokesman for the counter-terrorist operation, in the North Caucasus, Major-General Ilya Shabalkin, said that the two bandits were acting under the direct orders of Chechen warlord Doka Umarov.

They were planning terrorist acts in Grozny during the Victory Day celebrations.

Last year, militants killed Chechen President Akhmed Kadyrov in an explosion in a stadium in Grozny, during Victory Day parade, on May 9.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Abu Mujahid related to Abu Walid by marriage
2005-05-08
The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) prevented a series of terrorist attacks using virulent poisons, which were masterminded by Jordanian Abu Mujahid, a spokesman for the federal troops in the North Caucasus told Itar-Tass on Thursday. "Leaders of illegal armed groups were planning acts of terror in large cities in the North Caucasus. To this end, they had the necessary substances supplied from abroad," spokesman Ilya Shabalkin said.

Jordanian Abu Mujahid, an emissary of the international terrorist networks Brother Muslims and al Qaeda, controlled several Wahhabi groups in Ingushetia in Chechnya. He arrived in Chechnya from Jordan in 1992. "This mercenary, hiding from law-enforcement bodies, can use ID papers under the name of Samir Tovbulatov. His wife is a cousin of Arab mercenary Abu al-Walid, who was destroyed in an operation by federal forces in 2004. It underscores his belonging to a group of the most odious terrorist leaders who came to Chechnya from abroad, the spokesman said.

Law-enforcement bodies found out that the attacks using toxic substances were to have been carried out by a Wahhabi group led by Alash Daudov, 45. In the early 1990s, he served at a Grozny police station. He later became an ardent supporter of Wahhabism and joined illegal paramilitary groups. Daudov is personally involved in organizing the hostage taking raid into the Dubrovka theatre in Moscow in October 2002. He purchased a Volkswagen mini-bus for taking the terrorists to the theater.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Chemical attack by Basayev, Count Dooku, and al-Qaeda emissary thwarted
2005-05-06
Russian security forces said they foiled a major terrorist attack Thursday, discovering a truck bomb and a cache of poisons days before dozens of dignitaries arrive in Moscow for celebrations marking the Allied victory over Nazi Germany. The find is likely to raise fears that other terror attacks could be in the works as the world turns its attention to Russia and Monday's ceremonies marking the end of World War II. Russian authorities almost immediately blamed the planned attacks on militants, including some with reputed ties to al-Qaida. The truck with more than a ton of explosives was found near the Chechen capital, Grozny, said Maj. Gen. Ilya Shabalkin, chief spokesman for the federal forces in the North Caucasus region. The truck frame and chassis had been fitted with about 2,640 pounds of explosives, he said. "The only thing left to do was to put a suicide bomber behind the wheel and turn on the electric detonator," Shabalkin was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.

State-run television broadcast video of a man in camouflage fatigues and a black mask removing a tightly wrapped packet from beneath the cab of a blue-canopied truck parked on a muddy road. Other shots showed a man in fatigues extending an antenna from what looked like a briefcase used for remote-control detonation. Authorities linked the incident to Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev, and leaders Doku Umarov and Abdul-Khalim Sadulayev, the successor to slain rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov. Russia claimed the rebel leaders had also planned attacks using poisons and toxic substances in the capitals of the North Caucasus region and several large regional centers elsewhere in Russia. A cache containing a cyanide-based substance was discovered in an unidentified settlement on the Chechnya-Ingushetia border, the Federal Security Service said. It said the components were not produced in Russia or elsewhere in the former Soviet Union. It was not clear how much of the substance was found. "Experts have concluded that the application of these strong-acting poisons in minimal doses in crowded places, in vital enterprises and water reservoirs could produce numerous victims," said the security service, which is the successor agency to the KGB. It said that experts believe that less than an ounce could kill around 100 people.

Security services have been on alert for major terrorist attacks before Monday, the 60th anniversary of the Allied victory over the Nazis in Europe. Militants have struck twice in the past on the holiday — one of the most important dates on the Russian calendar. An attack last year killed Kremlin-backed Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov and as many as 24 others attending a parade in Grozny. A bombing in 2002 on a parade in the southern town of Kaspiisk killed 43 people. Underscoring the tension, Moscow authorities have reported almost daily this week that explosives or grenades had been found in cars. Special police and soldiers have been more visible on the streets and guarding station entrances. Chechnya's Interior Minister Ruslan Alkhanov told Interfax that two female suicide bombers blew themselves up as security forces attempted to detain them in a remote Chechen region. Two other fighters and a police officer were killed in the blast, Interfax said. It was unclear when the incident happened.

Yevgeny Volk, the head of the Moscow office of U.S. think-tank Heritage Foundation, said that while terrorists may be active, security personnel also are eager to underline their heightened state of awareness. "Special services ... are interested in showing their capabilities, in proving to their bosses that they are doing a good job," Volk said. "So it cannot be ruled out that they informed their superiors about something that hadn't taken place." Authorities blamed a militant group operating in Ingushetia for the planned chemical attacks. It said the main organizer was a Jordanian named Abu Majahid, who it said had arrived in Chechnya in 1992 and served as an emissary of al-Qaida.

The attack was to have been carried out by the so-called Amanat (Silence) jamaat, a group of adherents to the extremist Wahhabi branch of Islam, the FSB said. The group is headed by Alash Daudov, a former police official whom the service accused of complicity in the 2002 seizure of a Moscow theater, attacks on police in Grozny and Nazran in 2004, and the seizure of more than 1,200 hostages at a school in Beslan in September. The FSB alleged that Daudov had received the poisons intended for the attack through Abu Mujahid, who was believed to have obtained them from an Arab state, which it did not identify.
I think we can guess ...
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Russia Foils Major Terror Plot for VE
2005-05-05
Russia's Federal Security service said Thursday it foiled planned terror attacks ahead of Victory in Europe celebrations, discovering a truck packed with more than a ton of explosives and a cache of poisons allegedly intended for chemical attacks.
VE Day blasts are a Chechen/Wahabi tradition. Last year the Chechen president and 25 others were killed during VE day celebrations. In 2002, 40-some people were killed in Kaspiisk, Daghestan when a remote controlled bomb exploded during a VE day parade.
The truck was found near the Chechen capital of Grozny, said Maj. Gen. Ilya Shabalkin, chief spokesman for the federal forces in the North Caucasus region. Its frame and chassis were outfitted with about 2,600 pounds of explosives
Looking to up the ante by two orders of magnitude.
for an attack allegedly planned by Chechen rebel leaders Shamil Basayev, Doku Umarov and Abdul-Khalim Sadulayev — the successor to slain rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov. The truck was discovered on a road Thursday morning, Shabalkin said.

Security services have been on watch for major terrorist attacks around Monday's holiday, which this year marks the 60th anniversary of the Allied victory over the Nazis in Europe. It is one of the biggest holidays on the Russian calendar. Militants have struck twice in the past on the holiday, killing Kremlin-backed Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov [sic: they mean Kadyrov, but this is written by AP and all those Russer names sound alike] and up to 24 others attending a Grozny parade last year, and killing 43 people by bombing a parade in the southern Russian town of Kaspiisk in 2002. "The truck was fully prepared for a blast, the only thing left to do was to put a suicide-bomber behind the wheel and turn on the electric detonator," Shabalkin was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency. He said two men who drove the truck were detained and were being interrogated.

The Federal Security Service also said rebel leaders planned to use poisons and toxic substances for attacks in the capitals of the North Caucasus region and several large regional centers elsewhere in Russia. A cache containing a cyanide-based substance was discovered during combat in an unnamed settlement on the Chechen-Ingush border, said a statement from the Federal Security Service's press service. The components, which are not produced in Russia or elsewhere in the former Soviet Union, were brought in from abroad — possibly an Arab state, the service said. "Experts have concluded that the application of these strong-acting poisons in minimal doses in crowded places, in vital enterprises and water reservoirs could produce numerous victims," the security service said. It said less than an ounce of the poison could kill about 100 people.

The security service said a militant group operating in the Russian republic of Ingushetia, which borders Chechnya, was involved in the planned chemical attacks. The main organizer was a Jordanian named Abu Majahid, who arrived in Chechnya in 1992 and served as an emissary of al-Qaida, it said. The attack was to have been carried out by the so-called Amanat (Silence) jamaat, a group of adherents to the extremist Wahhabi branch of Islam, the security service said. The group is headed by Alash Daudov, a former police official accused of complicity in the 2002 Chechen rebel seizure of a Moscow theater that left 129 hostages dead, attacks on police in Grozny and Nazran in neighboring Ingushetia in summer 2004 and the rebels' seizure of more than 1,200 people in a southern Russia school in September, it said. The security service alleged that Daudov received the poisons from an Arab state, through Abu Mujahid.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
9 busted over the last 2 days
2005-05-04
Nine militants have been detained in Chechnya in during the past two days, spokesman for the regional headquarters of the anti-terrorist operation in the North Caucasus Maj. Gen. Ilya Shabalkin told Interfax on Monday.

Shabalkin said the detentions were the result of a number of energetic efforts meant to guarantee public security and neutralize militants. He said public support facilitated the success of the pinpoint actions.

Three of the militants were seized in Grozny. Two of them are suspected of organizing and perpetrating terrorist acts against the authorities and federal troops in the Vedeno and Shali districts. The third, a resident of Urus-Martan district, was part of a militant group in the Urus-Martan and Achkhoi-Martan districts.

Shabalkin said one more militant was captured near Grozny. A resident of Starye Atagi and a member of Isa Sadayev's armed group, he is suspected of several crimes, including armed attacks on civilians.

Five more militants were captured in operations in Petropavlovskaya, Novoterskoye, Gudermes and Urus-Martan. Detectives say they are suspected of involvement in terrorist attacks, and shooting at servicemen, Shabalkin said.

He said the situation in Chechnya during the weekend was generally calm due to the the precautions taken by the authorities to guarantee public order and security.
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