http://tinyurl.com/24j38hh

 


Power Struggle Among Russia's Militants


August 19, 2010 | 0856 GMT 

 
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/burton_and_stewart_on_security?fn=6516813170
> 



By Ben West and Lauren Goodrich

On Aug. 12, four members of the militant group the Caucasus
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20100414_caucasus_emirate?fn=1816944987>
Emirate (CE) appeared in a video posted on a Russian militant website
withdrawing their support from CE founder and leader Doku Umarov. The reason
for the mutiny was Umarov's Aug. 4 retraction of his Aug. 1 announcement
that he was stepping
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100802_russia_militant_leader_steps_down
?fn=3316944973>  down from the top leadership position. STRATFOR and many
others noted at the time that the Aug. 1 resignation was unexpected and
suggested that Umarov may have been killed. However, the Aug. 4 retraction
revealed that Umarov was still alive and that there was considerable
confusion over who was in control of the militant group. 

The mutineers were all high-level members of the militant group: Hussein
Gakayev, commander of the CE's Chechen forces; Aslambek Vadalov, commander
of Dagestani forces and to whom Umarov had briefly turned over control in
his Aug. 1 resignation; an Arab commander named Muhannad; and a veteran
field commander known as Tarkhan. The four CE commanders said Umarov's
renunciation showed disrespect for his subordinates and that, while the four
leaders continued to pledge support to the CE, they no longer supported
Umarov. Gakayev, Tarkhan and Muhannad had all appeared in a video that aired
Aug. 1 in which they supported Umarov's decision to appoint Vadalov CE emir.

To further confuse the issue, a video released Aug. 11 by Emir Adam, the CE
leader in Ingushetia, pledged his and his followers' loyalty to Umarov. The
next day, another video appeared featuring the group's new leader in
Dagestan, Emir Seyfullakh Gubdensky (who succeeded Vadalov after he became
deputy leader of the CE), similarly endorsing Umarov's reclamation of the
top CE post.

These disparate messages from top leaders paint a picture of confusion and
dissension in the CE that appears to mark a serious crisis for a group,
which, until recently, had been consolidating militant groups across the
Caucasus under a single, more strategic leadership structure. STRATFOR has
collected insight from sources familiar with the group and its leadership
turmoil that explains what happened and the nature of the threat that the CE
poses to Russian security in the Caucasus.


The Inside Story


According to a Russian source, the confusion caused by Umarov's apparent
indecision over the CE leadership position was a deliberate operation by
Russia's Federal
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100611_russia_fsbs_powers_expanded?fn=69
16944934>  Security Service (FSB). According to that source, the operation
that ultimately appears to have undermined Umarov's position as leader of
the CE began in early 2010. However, the FSB received intelligence only over
the past two months that set the stage for executing the operation. That
intelligence allegedly came from the CE's former leader in Ingushetia, Emir
Ali Taziyev, who was arrested by the FSB on June 9 in an Ingushetian
village. Taziyev allegedly provided the FSB information on the CE's
training, ideology, weapons procurement and leadership structure. This
information then allowed the FSB to activate a sleeper agent, Movladi
Udugov, who served directly under Umarov as the CE's head of media and
publicity. According to our source, Udugov was responsible for the
unauthorized release of the video in which Umarov announced that he was
stepping down and named Vadalov as his successor. 

The story goes that Umarov had recorded the video with the intent of saving
it and releasing it only in the event of his demise. This would ensure that
a crisis of succession wouldn't erupt because of his death or disappearance.
The fact that Vadalov was named as his successor on July 25 means that each
of the regional leaders within the CE had likely agreed to the decision. It
is important to note that the leadership crisis did not occur because
Vadalov was assigned to the post, but because Umarov appeared to have
stepped down and then reclaimed his title. Udugov provided the crucial blow
to Umarov's status as leader of the CE by releasing the resignation video
prematurely, laying the foundation for dissension among Umarov's followers.

The resulting flurry of approval and disapproval from the CE's corps of
commanders shows just how damaging the videos were. We have to be critical
of the Russian source's account of how all of this transpired, since the
source is likely interested in promoting the FSB's capabilities and its
penetration of Russia's most dangerous militant group. The account is
logical, however, since it does explain the unusual sequence of videos, and
the FSB is capable of infiltrating such a group. There are, of course, other
explanations for what could have motivated Udugov to release the tape:
Perhaps he was trying to trigger a power struggle within the group on his
own, or perhaps someone else inside the CE obtained the tape and released it
in hopes of weakening Umarov or promoting Vadalov. However, it is very
unlikely that the release was a mistake, since Umarov and his commanders
have proved very competent at running a successful militant movement. 

Looking deeper, it becomes obvious that a video alone would not have caused
dissension on the scale that we are seeing now within the CE. Had everything
been perfect in the CE and had Umarov enjoyed unwavering support, he could
have dismissed the video as an attempt to undermine his authority, promised
to punish those responsible and gone on with business. It is very apparent
that Umarov was not able to do this. The release of the videos exacerbated
divisions among CE factions that Umarov and his deputies were trying to
consolidate. By releasing the video of Umarov stepping down as commander,
Udugov (allegedly under FSB guidance) forced the divisions into the public
spotlight. 

According to our Russian source, the resignation scandal has split the CE
three ways. The first split concerns operational security. The CE knew that
penetrating the group was a top priority for the FSB and that it had to
remain vigilant against outsiders attempting to do just that. Simply the
allegation that one of Umarov's top advisers was working for the FSB
undermines the sense of operational security throughout the entire group.
Already, accusations of FSB involvement in the CE leadership crisis have
emerged in the open-source network, on sites like globaljihad.net. In such
an atmosphere, the level of trust among commanders decreases (as they begin
to wonder who is reporting to the FSB) and the level of paranoia increases.
Infighting at the top of any organization can quickly create operational
gridlock and reduce the organization's effectiveness. This is exactly why
the Russians might try to claim credit for the tape's release, even if they
were not responsible. 

The second split is generational and ideological. According to our source, a
younger faction of the CE (led by Vadalov) has accused Umarov and his cadre
of not protecting the ideological unity of the CE. It is no secret that
Umarov is much more experienced in and knowledgeable of military strategy
and tactics, while his background in Islamism is weak. He has bungled
religious protocol and terminology a number of times, undermining his
authority as emir of the group. Meanwhile, the older, more military-oriented
faction accuses the younger faction of being willing to work with Moscow and
sell out the movement. 

Power Struggle Among Russia's Militants

The third and possibly most volatile fault line is the tension between
regional groups within the Caucasus Emirate. The northern Caucasus republics
of Kabardino-Balkaria, North Ossetia, Ingushetia, Chechnya and Dagestan each
have their own, independent histories of militancy, with Chechen militants
traditionally being Moscow's highest-profile antagonists. Without the
support of the Chechen commander of the CE (Khusein Gakayev, who withdrew
his support for Umarov in the Aug. 12 video), Umarov has a serious deficit
of support in controlling the Caucasus Emirate. The advantage of having the
support of the current Ingushetian and Dagestani militant leaders is diluted
by the fact that Chechnya geographically lies directly between them,
rendering any trans-Caucasus network incomplete. Also, Chechens have been
the more successful leaders of militant movements in the Caucasus. Umarov
himself is Chechen, as was Shamil
<http://www.stratfor.com/russia_win_chechnya_not_victory?fn=6916944968>
Basayev, a commander of Chechen separatist forces in two wars against
Russia.


Threat and Inherent Weaknesses


It is exactly because of Doku Umarov's ability to bring together militants
of different motivations, generations and locations under the umbrella of
the Caucasus Emirate that made his group so threatening to the Russian
state. As a unified militant group, the CE proved capable of launching a
suicide
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100329_red_alert_bombing_moscow_special_
intelligence_guidance?fn=4516944987>  attack against Moscow's subway system
in March 2010 and carrying out relatively
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100331_russia_sophisticated_attack_dages
tan?fn=5916944931>  sophisticated attacks targeting security forces and
infrastructure. The CE leadership structure provided strategic guidance to
the individual militant groups operating in the separate republics that
actually carried out the attacks. With the recent crisis in leadership,
these capabilities will likely be severely weakened. 

Umarov announced the formation of the CE only in 2007, which means the group
was just three years old when the leadership turmoil broke out Aug. 1. This
is precious little time to consolidate militant groups across a region with
sharp geographic fragmentation that traditionally has caused groups to be
isolated and independent. Moscow has had plenty of problems controlling the
region and is faced with the same geographic challenges as the Caucasus
Emirate. A different source familiar with the CE said that Umarov has most
recently attempted to consolidate the CE by broadcasting his statements in
different languages, such as Avar, which is widely spoken in Dagestan. But
Avar is only one of 10 languages spoken across Dagestan alone, which makes
communicating efficiently to an audience across the Caucasus a difficult
task. 

That same source has said that the CE has had trouble moving food, supplies,
weapons and people across the Caucasus (this effort is complicated by
Russian security forces as well as geography), which means that each group
is responsible for providing for itself. This prevents standardization
across the militant movement and complicates cooperation among groups. It
also reduces the reliance of regional militant groups on the Caucasus
Emirate leadership, decreasing Umarov's control over the movement. If
militant commanders in Chechnya are supplying and recruiting on their own,
they are less likely to take orders on what to do with those resources from
detached leaders. However, lack of unity among the groups does not
necessarily make them less able to carry out the small-scale attacks that
are common in the Caucasus. On Aug. 17, five days after a split in the CE
leadership became apparent, a suicide bomber (most likely affiliated with a
group linked to the CE) attacked a police checkpoint along the border of
Ingushetia and North Ossetia.

Militant groups existed in the Caucasus long before the Caucasus Emirate was
formed and will continue to exist long after it is gone. The strategic
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20100706_caucasus_cauldron?fn=2916944981>
importance of the Caucasus and the fragmentation of its inhabitants due to
ethnicity, culture and geography (which makes for ideal guerrilla-warfare
terrain), ensure that whoever attempts to control the region will face
serious challenges from local populations who want to govern themselves.
With varying levels of success, these groups will continue to use violence
to undermine their respective governments, especially those seen as Moscow's
lackeys. 

Indeed, even though the Caucasus Emirate may be seriously disrupted by
recent turmoil in its leadership structure, the regional militant groups
that made up the CE will certainly continue to conduct attacks against
security forces and even civilians as they try to loosen Moscow's control
over the region. But the turmoil will reduce the strategic threat the
combined efforts of these disparate groups had posed to Moscow for the
foreseeable future.

                

 

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"Power
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20100818_power_struggle_among_russias_milita
nts>  Struggle Among Russia's Militants is republished with permission of
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