Estimates of casualties in the Second Chechen War vary wildly, from 25,000 to 200,000 civilian dead plus 8,000 to 40,000 Russian military. (Separate figures for Chechen military fatalities from the second war only are not yet referenced in this article.)
Note: Some of these figures include the First Chechen War of 1994–1996. They usually don't include the death toll in Dagestan, Ingushetia, and other neighbouring regions of North Caucasus, where the violence spilled over from Chechnya.
The following figures are not confirmed by serious academic sources or researchers, and are difficult to verify.
October 1, 1999 – December 31, 1999 – During the initial invasion in 1999, 259 Russian soldiers were killed. [1]
January 1, 2000 – December 31, 2000 – During the initial invasion and the following Chechen Insurgency in 2000, 110 Russian soldiers were killed. [1] [2]
January 1, 2001 – December 31, 2001 – During the Chechen insurgency in 2001, 504 Russian soldiers were killed. [1] [3]
October 1, 1999 – October 10, 2001 – During this period, 106 FSB and GRU operatives were killed. [4]
January 1, 2002 – December 31, 2002 – During the Chechen insurgency in 2002, 485 Russian soldiers were killed. [1] [3]
October 1, 1999 – December 23, 2002 – During the initial invasion and the following Chechen Insurgency from 1999 to 2002, 1,614 [1] [5] -1,822 [5] [6] Interior Ministry troops were killed.
January 1, 2003 – December 31, 2003 – During the Chechen insurgency in 2003, 300 Russian soldiers were killed. [1] [3]
January 1, 2004 – December 31, 2004 – During the Chechen insurgency in 2004, 162 Russian soldiers were killed. [1] [2]
January 1, 2005 – December 31, 2005 – During the Chechen insurgency in 2005, 107 Russian soldiers were killed. [1] [7]
January 1, 2004 – December 30, 2005 – During the Chechen insurgency in 2004 and 2005, 279 Interior Ministry troops were killed. [8]
July 1, 2005 - 10 Russian soldiers were killed this day by a bomb in Dagestan. [9]
August 20, 2002 – August 20, 2006 – During this period, 200 Interior Ministry troops were killed in Dagestan. [10]
January 1, 2006 – December 31, 2006 – During the Chechen insurgency in 2006, 57 Russian soldiers were killed. [11]
January 1, 2007 – December 31, 2007 – During the Chechen insurgency in 2007, 54 Russian soldiers were killed. [11]
January 1, 2007 – June 21, 2007 – During this period, 45 Interior Ministry troops were killed in both Chechnya and Dagestan. [12]
January 1, 2001 – December 31, 2007 – During the Chechen insurgency, 1,072 Chechen police officers were killed. [11] [13]
January 1, 2008 – October 23, 2008 – During this period, 28 Russian soldiers were killed. [14]
January 1, 2008 – December 31, 2008 – During 2008, 226 Interior Ministry troops were killed in the whole of the North Caucasus. [15]
Total: 3,676 Russian soldiers, 2,364-2,572 Interior Ministry troops, 1,072 Chechen police officers, and 106 FSB and GRU operatives killed.
In May 2000, Chechen rebels reported on their website that they have lost 1,380 men since fighting started with Russia in the breakaway republic. On the Russian side, military officials said they had lost 2,004 soldiers. [16]
In September 2000, the Prague Watchdog compiled the widely conflicting list [17] of casualties and enemy losses officially announced by both sides in the first year of the conflict.
By December 2002, 14,113 Chechen fighters were reported to have been killed. [18]
Between 2003 and 2009, 2,186 militants were reported to have been killed in the whole of the North Caucasus and 6,295 were captured. [19]
The Chechen separatist sources in 2003 cited figures of some 250,000 civilians, and up to 50,000 Russian servicemen, killed during the 1994-2003 period. The rebel side also acknowledged about 5,000 separatist combatants killed as of 1999–2004, mostly in the initial phases of the war.
In November 2004, the chairman of Chechnya's pro-Moscow State Council, Taus Djabrailov, said over 200,000 people have been killed in the Chechen Republic since 1994, including over 20,000 children. [20] In August 2005, Djabrailov gave a conflicting figure of 160,000 killed, of which between 30,000 and 40,000 were ethnic Chechens. [21]
In June 2005, Dukvakha Abdurakhmanov, a deputy prime minister in the Kremlin-controlled Chechen administration, said about 300,000 people have been killed during two wars in Chechnya over the past decade; he also said that more than 200,000 people have gone missing. Every resident of Chechnya has scores of relatives who have been killed or gone missing, he said. [22] [23]
In September 2006, Anatoly Kulikov, deputy chairman of the Russian State Duma committee on security said that In the 12 years of our Russian antiterrorist war in the Chechen Republic, aggregate losses among the federal forces, illegal armed groups and civilians are estimated at about 45,000 people. [24]
In November 2006, self-exiled separatist leader Akhmed Zakayev said that "Putin has already killed more than 250,000 innocent Chechens". [25] [26]
Ramzan Kadyrov, head of the Chechen Republic, said: "we lost 300,000 people". [27] In addition, Chechen journalist Kazbek Chanturiya put the figure of Chechens killed in two wars at 300,000 . [28]
Academics and human rights organizations generally estimate the number of civilian casualties to be 40,000, a figure attributed to the research of expert John Dunlop which includes at least 35,000 civilian casualties. This estimate is also consistent with post-war publications by the Federal State Statistics Service estimating between 30,000 and 40,000 civilians were killed. The Moscow-based human rights organization, Memorial, which actively documented human rights abuses throughout the war, estimated a slightly higher number of 50,000 civilian casualties. Sources estimate that a large percentage of civilian fatalities were the result of the Battle of Grozny (December 1994–March 1995) during the First Chechen War. From the start of the battle to mid-February, it is estimated between 25,000 and 30,000 civilian deaths occurred. This estimate indicated that the majority of the civilian fatalities in the entire war occurred during a four-month period. Of the estimated 25,000 killed in the Battle of Grozny, it is estimated that 18,000 were killed by mid-January. According to General Dudayev, the first president of the Chechen Republic, 85 percent of civilians killed in the battle (approximately 25,500) were ethnic Russians; this estimate is close to the figure put forward by Russian human rights campaigner Sergei Kovalyov, who estimated the number of ethnic Russian deaths at 24,000. [29]
In 2000, the Russian weekly Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye (Independent Military Review) compiled an incomplete list of 1,176 military servicemen fallen in Chechnya during the first year of conflict. If available the list included name, year and place of birth, rank and military unit, place, date and cause of death. [30]
For the period from 1994 to 2003, estimates ranged from 50,000 to 250,000 civilians and 10,000 to 50,000 Russian servicemen killed. Given that almost certainly both sides have tended to exaggerate enemy military casualties while minimizing their own and grossly underestimating its responsibility for civilian losses, the Russian-Chechen Friendship Society set the conservative estimate of death toll in this time period at about 150,000 - 200,000 civilians, 20,000 to 40,000 Russian soldiers, and possibly the same number of Chechen rebels. [31]
In February 2003, the Union of the Committees of Soldiers' Mothers of Russia, estimated that some 11,000 servicemen have been killed, with another 25,000 wounded, since 1999. It also estimated the civilian death toll at about 20,000 people. [32] Their estimate for the earlier Chechen war was 14,000 dead troops as compared with the official figure of 5,500.
According to 2003 Military Balance, the annual report International Institute for Strategic Studies, the British-based think tank, Russian forces suffered 4,749 dead, wounded or missing in hostile and non-hostile incidents in Chechnya between August 2002 and August 2003. [33] [34]
In 2004, Denis Trifonov of the British strategic-research centre Jane's Information Group estimated that the federal forces in Chechnya suffered some 9,000 to 11,000 combat deaths during the second war's most intense phase, from its beginning in late summer 1999 to early 2002. In 2003, they lost roughly 3,000 dead. [35]
In 2004, the human rights group Memorial estimated the number of civilian casualties of both wars at "more than 200,000" and the number of Russian soldiers killed at 20,000 to 40,000 [36]
In 2006, Alexander Cherkasov of the human rights group Memorial pointed out that the Russian government did not make any attempt to count civilian casualties in the war of 1994–96, nor after 1999. Many figures have been quoted, some greatly exaggerated; a figure of 250,000 [civilian] dead in the two wars is sometimes repeated, but without there being adequate substantiation of such a number, Cherkasov said, and concluded: The total number of peaceful residents of the Chechen Republic who perished during the two wars may have reached 70,000. (...) [In the second war] the total number of civilians killed, including those who disappeared, adds up to between 14,800 to 24,100. However, he admitted that the accuracy of his estimates was not high.
In 2007, Memorial estimated about 15,000 Russian soldiers have died in total, while others estimated up to 40,000. [37]
According to Amnesty International in 2007 the second war has killed up to 25,000 civilians since 1999 (many in the first months of the conflict), while up to another 5,000 people are missing. "Many thousands" of people are believed to be buried in unmarked graves. [38] [39]
A report of the Society for Threatened Peoples in November 2005 said that the total number of casualties of the first war was 80,000 and the total number of casualties of the second war was at least 80,000. [40]
French public radio channel «France Culture» names a number from 100,000 to 300,000. [41]
Al Jazeera puts losses at 300,000. [42]
Russian politician Konstantin Borovoi: "300,000 Chechens died in the Chechen war". [43]
The First Chechen War, also referred to as the First Russo-Chechen War, was a struggle for independence waged by the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria against the Russian Federation from 11 December 1994 to 31 August 1996. This conflict was preceded by the battle of Grozny in November 1994, during which Russia covertly sought to overthrow the new Chechen government. Following the intense Battle of Grozny in 1994–1995, which concluded with a pyrrhic victory for the Russian federal forces, Russia's subsequent efforts to establish control over the remaining lowlands and mountainous regions of Chechnya were met with fierce resistance and frequent surprise raids by Chechen guerrillas. The recapture of Grozny in 1996 played a part in the Khasavyurt Accord (ceasefire), and the signing of the 1997 Russia–Chechnya Peace Treaty.
The Second Chechen War took place in Chechnya and the border regions of the North Caucasus between the Russian Federation and the breakaway Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, from August 1999 to April 2009.
Vladimir Anatolievich Shamanov is a retired Colonel General of the Russian Armed Forces who was Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Airborne Troops (VDV) from May 2009 to October 2016 and a Russian politician. After his retirement in October 2016, Shamanov became head of the State Duma Defense Committee.
The 1999 war in Dagestan, also known as the Dagestan incursions, was an armed conflict that began when the Chechen-based Islamic International Peacekeeping Brigade (IIPB), an Islamist group led by Shamil Basayev, Ibn al-Khattab, Ramzan Akhmadov and Arbi Barayev, invaded the neighboring Russian republic of Dagestan on 7 August 1999, in support of the Shura of Dagestan separatist rebels. The war ended with a major victory for the Russian Federation and Republic of Dagestan and the retreat of the IIPB. The invasion of Dagestan alongside a series of apartment bombings in September 1999 served as the main casus belli for the Second Chechen War.
The 1999–2000 battle of Grozny was the siege and assault of the Chechen capital Grozny by Russian forces, lasting from late 1999 to early 2000. This siege and assault of the Chechen capital resulted in the widespread devastation of Grozny. In 2003, the United Nations designated Grozny as the most destroyed city on Earth due to the extensive damage it suffered. The battle had a devastating impact on the civilian population. It is estimated that between 5,000 and 8,000 civilians were killed during the siege, making it the bloodiest episode of the Second Chechen War.
Human rights violations were committed by the warring sides during the second war in Chechnya. Both Russian officials and Chechen rebels have been regularly and repeatedly accused of committing war crimes including kidnapping, torture, murder, hostage taking, looting, rape, decapitation, and assorted other breaches of the law of war. International and humanitarian organizations, including the Council of Europe and Amnesty International, have criticized both sides of the conflict for blatant and sustained violations of international humanitarian law.
The Kizlyar–Pervomayskoye hostage crisis, also known in Russia as the terrorist act in Kizlyar, occurred in January 1996 during the First Chechen War. What began as a raid by Chechen separatist forces led by Salman Raduyev against a federal military airbase near Kizlyar, Dagestan, became a hostage crisis involving thousands of civilians, most of whom were quickly released. It culminated in a battle between the Chechens and Russian special forces in the village of Pervomayskoye, which was destroyed by Russian artillery fire. Although the Chechens escaped from the siege with some of their hostages, at least 26 hostages and more than 200 combatants on both sides died. One third of the homes in Pervomayskoye were destroyed.
The Shatoy ambush was a significant event during the First Chechen War. It occurred near the town of Shatoy, located in the southern mountains of Chechnya. Chechen insurgents under the leadership of their Arab-born commander, Ibn al-Khattab, would launch an attack on a large Russian Armed Forces army convoy resulting in a three hour long battle.
Vilayat Dagestan, formerly known as Shariat Jamaat, was an Islamist Jihadist group based in the Russian republic of Dagestan and is part of the Caucasus Emirate. The group is closely associated with the separatist conflicts in the nearby Russian republics of Chechnya and Ingushetia, and was created during the Second Chechen War in favor of Dagestan's independence as an Islamic state.
The Borozdinovskaya operation was a zachistka-type operation by Russian forces in Borozdinovskaya, Chechnya, on June 4, 2005, during the Second Chechen War. Members of the Special Battalion Vostok, an ethnic Chechen Spetsnaz unit of the Russian GRU, killed or disappeared 12 people in the ethnic minority Avar village of Borozdinovskaya, near the border with the Dagestan. Representatives of the Russian federal authorities expressed outrage over the incident, and the commander of the unit responsible was convicted.
The Mujahideen in Chechnya were foreign Islamist Mujahideen volunteers that fought in Chechnya and other parts of the North Caucasus.
The insurgency in the North Caucasus was a low-level armed conflict between Russia and militants associated with the Caucasus Emirate and, from June 2015, the Islamic State, in the North Caucasus. It followed the (Russian-proclaimed) official end of the decade-long Second Chechen War on 16 April 2009. It attracted volunteers from the MENA region, Western Europe, and Central Asia. The Russian legislation considers the Second Chechen War and the insurgency described in this article as the same "counter-terrorist operations on the territory of the North Caucasus region".
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