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Putin’s warlord ally adds 3,000 former Wagner mercenaries to his forces: ‘Fulfilling the task of the state’

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A Chechen warlord has added 3,000 former Wagner mercenaries to his growing forces, giving him control over a sizable force inside the Russian army. 

«One of the Wagner commanders with the call sign Ratibor will join the legendary Akhmat special forces,» Chechen commander Ramzan Kadyrov said. «With him, 3,000 former fighters of the Wagner PMC [private military company] will join the special forces.»

The Chechen commander, Maj. Gen. Apti Alaudinov, said the former mercenaries joining Ratibor will have previously served him while in service for Wagner. 

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Ratibor hailed the Chechen forces, insisting that the former Wagner troops «can once again prove our efficiency and that we are fulfilling the task of the state,» according to East2West.

Russia Wagner Army

Chechen warlord Ramzan Kadyrov, left, with Maj. Gen. Apti Alaudinov, adds another 3,000 former Wagner mercenary fighters to a burgeoning armed force under his control. (East2West)

Kadyrov, the 47-year-old head of the Chechen Republic since 2007, proudly touted the «great news» that the much-feared mercenaries would bolster his army. While not giving clear indication as to how involved the Chechen military could be in the coming months, he said they could have a «significant impact» in Ukraine. 

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Some have speculated that Kadyrov is keeping the force at the ready to defend Russian President Vladimir Putin against another potential coup – the first of which, ironically, Wagner had carried out under its founder and leader Yevgeny Prigozhin, which led to the force’s dissolution. 

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Prigozhin died when his private plane exploded, killing him and some fellow passengers, along with both pilots. 

Another theory suggested that Kadyrov may be waiting in case Putin should die, leaving Chechnya the chance to make a move to establish its independence and shore up power in the scramble to fill the vacuum Putin’s death would leave. 

Chechen warlord mercenaries

Ramzan Kadyrov’s armed units raises questions about him building up his own army while claiming he arms men for Russia’s war with Ukraine. (East2West)

Kadyrov has proudly tried to integrate Wagner to his forces since the group’s dissolution, bringing in a large contingent of the mercenaries to train his Akhmat Special Forces, according to Reuters. 

«I am glad that today the ranks of the famous (Akhmat) unit have been joined by fighters who have excellent combat experience and have proven themselves as brave and efficient warriors,» Kadyrov wrote in a message on Telegram posted in Nov. 2023. «I am confident that in the upcoming battles they will fully live up to their reputation.»

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The new additions help to strengthen what some consider Kadyrov’s «personal army» on the Russian federal dime, according to Kavkaz Realii, an independent media outlet that is part of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 

Chechen Akhmat forces

Formation of Ramzan Kadyrov’s armed units raises questions about him building up his own army while claiming he arms men for Russia’s war with Ukraine

Kadyrov’s approach to governance relies on highly repressive measures, including a ban on all music outside 80 to 116 beats per minute – a measure seen as generally helping to ban Western music and helping to align with the «Chechen mentality and musical rhythm» to help preserve «the future» of the Chechen people, Euronews reported. 

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«(I) have announced the final decision, agreed with the head of the Chechen Republic Ramzan Akhmatovich Kadyrov, that from now on all musical, vocal and choreographic works must correspond to a tempo of 80 to 116 beats per minute,» Chechen culture minister Musa Dadayev said, according to the Russian state new agency TASS.

United Nations human rights experts in 2017 also urged authorities to investigate allegations that gay men in the almost entirely Muslim republic were targeted, detained, tortured and murdered for their sexuality. 

Reuters contributed to this report. 

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Zelenskyy wants nukes or NATO; Trump special envoy Kellogg says ‘slim and none’ chance

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy this week said that if the U.S. cannot guarantee a quick path toward NATO membership, then there are alternative security options Kyiv would accept: nuclear weapons. 

But don’t think the United States is eager to agree to those terms. 

«The chance of them getting their nuclear weapons back is somewhere between slim and none,» retired Lt. General Keith Kellogg, special envoy to Ukraine and Russia, told Fox News Digital. «Let’s be honest about it, we both know that’s not going to happen.»

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In 1994, following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukraine agreed to give Russia its nuclear arms in exchange for reassurances from Russia, the U.S. and the U.K. that its sovereignty and independence would be respected – a treaty Moscow has violated with its repeated invasions – and in an interview on Tuesday, Zelenskyy argued that Ukraine should be given its arms «back» if a timely NATO membership is off the table.

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, second left, says Kyiv should be given NATO membership or nukes to defend against Russia. (Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP)

But Kellogg, the man tasked by President Donald Trump to help bring an end to the three-year war, said rearming Ukraine with nuclear weapons is a non-starter.

«Remember, the president said we’re a government of common sense,» he said. «When somebody says something like that, look at the outcome or the potential. That’s using your common sense.»

Zelenskyy on Tuesday confirmed his willingness to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin face-to-face if that is the best option for bringing an end to the war, though the Kremlin chief has not agreed to any in-person meeting with the Ukrainian leader.

Trump on Sunday said that initial talks had begun with both Ukraine and Russia, and Kellogg this week confirmed that Kyiv and Moscow will need to make concessions if there is going to be a peace deal.

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The administration has been tight-lipped on what sort of compromises will need to be made, particularly when it comes to the biggest hot-button issue for both Zelenskyy and Putin: Ukrainian NATO membership. 

Kellogg wouldn’t comment on where Trump lands when it comes to backing either Ukraine with a membership in the security alliance or Russia in denying its southern neighbor access to the top coalition.

Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg

Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg (Drew Angerer/Getty Images/File)

«That’s one of the reasons I’m going next week to Europe, to actually see them face-to-face,» he said. «I can bring that back to the president and say, ‘OK, Mr. President, this is their concern. This is what the issues are.’»

Kellogg is set to travel to the Munich Security Conference, which runs Feb. 14-16, where he said he will meet with world leaders to discuss Russia’s war in Ukraine and get a better idea of where nations like the U.K., Germany and Denmark, along with other top providers of military aid to Ukraine, stand on negotiations to end the war.

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«As you develop the plans to end this carnage, you have to make sure that you’ve got the feel of everybody in play,» Kellogg said. «Once we get to have these face-to-face discussions, then you can really kind of work … on concessions.»

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NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte last month urged member nations to increase their support for Ukraine, an issue he said is vastly important when it comes to bolstering NATO deterrence in the face of the Russia, China, North Korea, Iran bloc.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Then-Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump meets Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at Trump Tower in New York on Sept. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

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«If we get a bad deal, it would only mean that we will see the president of Russia high-fiving with the leaders of North Korea, Iran and China, and we cannot accept that,» Rutte said. «That will be geopolitically a big, a big mistake.»

Rutte has urged NATO nations to ramp up defense spending and warned that if Russia comes out on top in this war, it will cost NATO allies «trillions» not «billions.»

Kellogg will also press NATO allies to increase defense spending and, as directed by Trump, to start shouldering the burden of the war in Ukraine.


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