An army of one
The enormous Chechen military reserve Ramzan Kadyrov always brags about simply does not exist

During Vladimir Putin’s brief visit to Chechnya on 20 August, Ramzan Kadyrov publicly bragged that he had sent over 40,000 troops to bolster Russian forces fighting in Ukraine, including over 19,000 soldiers who had voluntarily enlisted, before alluding to an enormous military reserve he had on standby that was ready to join the war at a moment’s notice.
Shortly after Putin’s four-hour visit to the North Caucasus republic had drawn to a close, according to sources who spoke to Novaya Gazeta Europe, Chechen Interior Ministry district heads were issued with orders requiring each police station in the republic to deliver a quota of 25 “volunteers” to enlist in Kadyrov’s militia. The move suggests that rather than significant military reserves, all that Kadyrov has permanently ready to deploy is an ability to tell dazzling, barefaced lies to his benefactor, and that he will do everything in his power to avoid mobilisation in Chechnya.
How has Kadyrov managed to maintain the illusion of a mass army of “Chechen foot soldiers” ready to fight for Putin?
The Akhmat-Chechnya regiment, which was guarding Russia’s borders in the Kursk region at the time of the Ukrainian attack, lacks the level of organisation or sufficient training to undertake real military operations.
Indeed, most of what the generation of Chechens who grew up under Putin know about war they learned from playing computer games.
In February 2022 Kadyrov assembled several thousand so-called “Putin foot soldiers” in Grozny and promised to “take Kiev in three days”.
Sending ethnic Chechen units to Ukraine is also one of Kadyrov’s “tricks”, only on an even larger scale.












