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jibjaba4 t1_j9399hc wrote

While I generally approve of anti-Putin sentiment he's just wrong. There were some significant Chechen groups in Syria but were a tiny fraction of the opposition overall. Russia also heavily backed Assad, the link between Russia and Assad was probably a major motivator for the Chechens.

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byOlaf t1_j93fm0d wrote

I know he's wrong, that's why I was asking for evidence of his claims. Extraordinary claims and all that...

This seems like some conspiracy theorist and the fact that he will never return with evidence should speak louder than anything I could say to rebut it.

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drawkbox t1_j93otns wrote

"I'm baaaaaaccckkkkk"

Hey, how cute, you found a friend. Look at you guys, you work well together. "Do you make an effective team?" -- Tet

There is more where this came from...

Sure beyond the obviousness of this going on here you go...

Russia, Chechnya and Dagestan and others supplied 5k fighters at minimum

> - Russia: 5,000 (380 returnees)

> - Tunisia: 4,000 (900 returnees)

> - Jordan: 3,950 (250 returnees)

> - Saudi Arabia: 3,244 (760 returnees)

> - Turkey: 3,000 (900 returnees)

> - Uzbekistan: 2,500

> - France: 1,910 (398 returnees)

> - Morocco: 1,699 (236 returnees)

> - Tajikistan: 1,502 (147 returnees)

> - China: 1,000

> - Germany: 960 (303 returnees)

> - Lebanon: 900

> - Azerbaijan: 900 (49 returnees)

> - Kyrgyzstan: 863 (63 returnees)

> - United Kingdom: 850 (425 returnees)

> - Indonesia: 800 (183 returnees)

> - Kazakhstan: 600 (113-128 returnees)

> - Libya: 600

> - Egypt: 600

> - Turkmenistan: 500

Origins of foreign fighters

> Fighters include those from the Gulf Arab states, Tunisia (following its own Tunisian revolution), Libya (following the Libyan Civil War), China, other Arab states, Russia, including the North Caucasus region, and Western countries. Some jihadist groups are dominated by a single nationality, as is the case with the Caucasus Emirate (Chechens) and the Turkistan Islamic Party (Uyghurs), or the pro-government Afghan Shia Liwa Fatemiyoun.

> A 7 December 2015 report by the Soufan Group gave estimates for the number of foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq by their country and region of origin based on information dated between 2014 and 2015. The study, which only included foreign fighters with ISIL, al-Nusra and other Sunni jihadist factions, listed the countries with the largest number of foreign fighters were Tunisia (6000), Saudi Arabia (2500), Russia (2400), Turkey (2100), Jordan (2000+) while the number of fighters by region was reported to be: the Middle East (8240), the Maghreb (8000), Western Europe (5000), former Soviet Republics (4700), Southeast Asia (900), the Balkans (875), and North America (289)

Russia plays multiple sides against each other within countries experiencing internal conflict, using these conflicts as a wedge to deepen its regional influence. The Middle East offers Russia many such opportunities for controlled strife.

Support Opposing Sides Simultaneously: Russia’s Approach to the Gulf and the Middle East

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Leifseed t1_j99vzox wrote

wow the same post twice as if the first didn't happen.

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drawkbox t1_j9a2nt5 wrote

Just replying to two people. If you look closely Inspector Gadget, they are different messages with the same info.

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drawkbox t1_j93p2po wrote

When are people going to learn that the Kremlin has a favored side but manipulates all sides? Kremlin strategy all through history since the Empire is to control false opposition first, then allow more easy victories when you can pressure from both ends.

Russia has backed Syria since the Syrian Islamic Revolution which they help them with since the 1940s-1950s, they put in Assad and his father. They regularly mess with their leveraged assets. When any start to make any Western move, they attack them and then say, "look at what the West did".

Russia plays multiple sides against each other within countries experiencing internal conflict, using these conflicts as a wedge to deepen its regional influence. The Middle East offers Russia many such opportunities for controlled strife.

Support Opposing Sides Simultaneously: Russia’s Approach to the Gulf and the Middle East

1