Redeeming futures
How Kadyrov’s potential successor has been using the war in Ukraine as a path to redemption

Apti Alaudinov, one of the most likely heirs to the Chechen throne in the light of leader Ramzan Kadyrov’s illness, has used the war in Ukraine to earn the Kremlin’s trust and help win back Kadyrov’s favour.
This was when Alaudinov understood it was time to switch to the winning team — and the best way to do that was to present the head of another sworn enemy of Kadyrov on a platter.
It was the first of many hits on Kadyrov’s political rivals, which culminated in his wielding absolute power in Chechnya.
Temirbaev’s lack of restraint didn’t go unnoticed: anyone he spoke to in that period was detained, and Temirbaev himself was killed in a “car accident” two years later.
But while Moscow licked its wounds at the failed blitzkrieg, Grozny got straight down to business.
“It was my vow before God that I was going to a holy war and I needed nothing for it but the gratitude of the Almighty,” he said.
All of these units, including that of the volunteers, had Akhmat in their name. There were eventually so many that they became virtually indistinguishable.
The overwhelming majority of Akhmat forces the Chechen authorities nurture with such fanfare do not actually see combat on the front line.


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