Battle of Grozny (November 1994)
November 1994 Battle of Grozny | |||||||
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Part of First Chechen War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Russian Federation Pro-russian Chechen opposition (Arsanov-clan)! Armed forces: 4400-4600 combatants! 4000 pro-russian chechen militiamen from the Arsanov-clan and 400-600 russian soldiers and mercenaries, most of them from the Tank-divisions in Tambov and Kantemirova, who staffed the 100 tanks and APC´s. Losses: 300-450 pro-russian chechen militiamen killed, 70 russian soldiers killed, several hundred pro-russian chechens and russian troops wounded, 150-200 prisoners,among them 65 russian soldiers, 76 tanks and APC´s destroyed and captured. | Separatist Chechen Republic of Ichkeria! Armed forces: Several thousand combatants! Chechen National Guard, Chechen Police, Chechen Presidential Guard, "Abkhaz Batallion" (chechens who were fighting in the Abkhazia-war), hundreds of volunteers. Losses: several dozen killed and wounded | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
russian commanders: Aleksandr Kotenkov, Gennady Zhukov, pro-russian chechen commanders: Umar Avtorkhanov, Beslan Gantamirov, Ruslan Labazanov, | Dzhokhar Dudayev, Aslan Maskhadov, Shamil Basayev, Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, Ruslan Gelayev |
The November 1994 Battle of Grozny was an abortive coup d'état attempt by Chechen opposition forces, sponsored and aided by the government of the Russian Federation, to seize the Chechen capital of Grozny and overthrow the Chechen President Dzhokhar Dudayev. The attack was conducted by armed formations of the Chechen opposition council with a clandestine support of Russian federal armor and aircraft on 26 November 1994. The fighting subdued after the first 10 hours, but some clashes continued until the following day.
What was supposed to be a quick black operation of regime change against the separatist government of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria (ChRI) ended in a spectacular fiasco, prompting the government in Moscow to carry out a large-scale military invasion of the republic that began in December 1994.
Background
In the summer of 1994 the FSK (the former KGB and future FSB) began an active co-operation with leaders of the Chechen internal opposition against Dudayev, uniting them in a body named the Provisional Council of the Chechen Republic. Forces of Umar Avturkhanov (a former officer of the Soviet MVD) and Beslan Gantemirov (a former mayor of Grozny and Dudayev's ally-turned-enemy) received from Moscow not only money but also training and arms, including heavy weapons. The months of August and September saw the outbreak of fighting between the opposition and Dudayev's forces. By this time, the opposition had established a well armed force of several hundred men, equipped with armoured vehicles and covertly backed by Russian helicopters operating from an air base at Mozdok, Republic of North Ossetia–Alania. This military campaign climaxed in an attack on Grozny on 15–16 October, when the militias of Gantamirov (advancing north from the newly seized ChRI base at Gekhi) and Ruslan Labazanov (advancing south from Znamenskoye) unsuccessfully attempted to take the city by a joint assault for the first time (Labazanov alone had previously also attempted to enter Grozny on August 24).[1]
Disappointed by their failures and aware of their military weakness up to and after the October assault, the Chechen opposition, aided by an ethnic-Chechen former Chairman of the State Duma, Ruslan Khasbulatov, intensified their lobbying with the FSK and Russian president Boris Yeltsin's staff in favour of more direct involvement on Moscow's part. As a result, Avturkhanov and Gantemirov, who by then have joined their militias, received all the weapons, instructors, training and media support they requested, setting the ground for the final assault. In October, Russia's Defense Minister General Pavel Grachev ordered the formation of a special task force of the Main Operations Directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, led by the Deputy Chief of the Main Operations Directorate Anatoly Kvashnin and General Leontiy Shevtsov.[1] Active duty tank crewmen from Russia's elite formations in the Moscow Military District, as well as other Russian personnel such as 18 helicopter crewmen from the North Caucasus Military District,[2] were recruited as a mercenaries, provided with fake documents and sent into Chechnya. A transport of 50 additional armored vehicles were also brought in by the FSK.[3] The issues of recruitment (Russian tank commanders were reportedly offered an equivalent of $1,500 to participate in the coup) and transfer of weapons involved the Deputy Director of the FSK in charge of supervising the Caucasus, General Sergei Stepashin (his emissary to Chechnya was the FSK Colonel Khromchenko) and Russia's Deputy Minister for Nationalities, General Alexander Kotenkov, as well as his direct superior, Nikolai Yegorov.[4]
Attack
On 22 November, the Provisional Council began preparing their final assault on Grozny. A large group of Russian officers led Chief of General Staff, Mikhail Kolesnikov, flew from Moscow to Mozdok, and the direct supervision of combat operations was entrusted to the deputy commander of Russia's 8th Guards Army Corps from Volgograd, General Gennady Zhukov.[1] A convoy of Russian armored vehicles entered the territory of Chechnya. The first clash took place 10 kilometers from the border near Tolstoi-Yurt, when a small group of Dudayev's supporters ambushed the convoy and disabled two tanks. On the following day, en route towards Urus-Martan, the convoy was again attacked near the settlement of Alkhan-Kala (Yermolovka) resulting in a loss of another tank.[4] In spite of this, the pro-Dudayev's forces in Grozny were believed to be unable to organize resistance to such a large-scale attack.
On the morning of 26 November, the Russian and their Chechen allies entered the capital in the motorised columns advancing from two directions, Nadterechny District and Urus-Martanovsky District, supported by several unmarked federal attack aircraft. According to Chechen commander Dalkhan Kozayev, the coup force in Grozny numbered 42 T-72 main battle tanks, eight BTR-80 armoured personnel carriers, various other vehicles, a number of aircraft, and more than 3,000 men.[5] Russian sources give similar figures of about 40–42 tanks (by one count, 14 of them manned by the Chechen opposition and the rest by Russians[2]), supported from air by six helicopters[2] and six Sukhoi Su-27 air superiority fighters,[6] but give much lower figures of no more than 1,000–1,500 allied Chechen militiamen (including Labazanov's 30 remaining fighters after his militia was defeated at Argun[2]). The attack was met with an improvised but fierce defense by the Chechen government forces and loyalist militias (prominently the battle-hardened Abkhaz Battalion[2] made of veterans of the War in Abkhazia and led by Shamil Basayev) in the city center, including an ambush near the Chechen presidential palace and the fighting at the State Security headquarters, the railway station and the television center. Soon the assault turned into a disaster as the defenders burned or captured most of the attacking armored vehicles, capturing scores of Russian servicemen in the process (mostly after having trapped a large group of them in Kirov Park, Leninsky district), and completely routed the opposition.
Casualties
- According to Western sources, over 300 people died and the attackers lost most of their vehicles;[3] in addition, four Russian helicopter gunships and one Sukhoi Su-25 close air support aircraft were reportedly downed.[7] According to the figures cited by Human Rights Watch and Armor, between 70[8] and 120[9] Russian service personnel were taken prisoner.
- Dudayev's loyalists claimed killing 350 attackers, destroying about 20 tanks[10] and capturing four or five after the crews surrendered or fled.[5] According to a 2010 count by Kavkaz Center, 20 tanks, 23 armoured personnel carriers and 18 infantry fighting vehicles were destroyed; three tanks, eight APCs and four IFVs were captured; 300–450 opposition militia and 70 Russian mercenaries were killed; hundreds more were wounded; and 150–200 were taken prisoner, including about 35 officers of the Guards divisions Tamanskaya and Kantemirovskaya.[11] All that remained of the Russian tank force and the Chechen opposition formations had left the city on the same day.
- According to Russian sources, 40–50 men were taken prisoner (mostly Russian soldiers)[1][6] and all but 18 tanks were lost.[1][2] By one Russian count, the pro-Moscow forces suffered 40 killed and 168 wounded on the first day;[1] another Russian source alleged that 70 opposition fighters from Ken-Yurt who had surrendered at the TV station were then beheaded by Dudayev's National Guard.[2]
Aftermath
This defeat was catastrophic, not only in military but also in political terms. Any Russian complicity and knowledge of the operation was at first denied by Moscow, but then acknowledged after 20 captured Russian servicemen were paraded before television cameras[12] and Dudayev threatened to shoot them if Yeltsin would not recognise his own soldiers.[13] On 1 December, Yeltsin vowed to help the Russian prisoners, the first indirect acknowledgement of Russian involvement.[8]
A failure of the coup attempt exhausted Russia's means of waging war against Dudayev by proxy means and leading to launching an all out direct intervention in December 1994. On 28 November, the Security Council of Russia met in an emergency meeting, adopting a secret decision to prepare a plan for a military operation in Chechnya within 14 days,[4] and Russia's Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin called on for Yeltsin to "restore the constitutional order in the Chechen Republic".[1] On the same day, a large air strike by the Russian military aviation eliminated every military and civilian aircraft available to Dudayev's government and destroyed the runways at both airfields near Grozny (the Khankala air base and at the Grozny Airport).[4] On 29 November, Yeltsin gave Chechnya 48 hours to disband all "illegal armed formations", disarm, and release all prisoners.[8] On 10 December 1994, tens of thousands of Russian regulars were ordered to move towards Grozny from Dagestan, Ingushetia and North Ossetia, and the First Chechen War officially began.
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Война в Чечне – Хроника войны (Russian)
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Десять лет позорному штурму Грозного (Russian)
- 1 2 "Tanks in the Street: Lessons Learned Through Bytes not Blood - DTIC". Retrieved 2014-05-27.
- 1 2 3 4 "How the war started". Mashar.free.fr. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
- 1 2 "The first Grozny battle - 26 November 1994" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2008. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
- 1 2 Спецслужбы разжигают войну в Чечне (Russian)
- ↑ Russia's Strategy in Chechnya: A Case Study in Failure, Maxwell Air Force Base Air War College, April 1997.
- 1 2 3 Russia's War in Chechnya: Victims Speak Out, Human Rights Watch, January 1995.
- ↑ Red Dawn in Chechnya: A Campaign Chronicle, Armor, March–April 1995.
- ↑ Fire in the Caucasus, TIME, 12 December 1994.
- ↑ Tank armada of Russian troops defeated in Grozny (Jokhar) on 26 November 1994 - Kavkazcenter.com.
- ↑ The Battle of Grozny: Deadly Classroom for Urban Combat, Parameters, summer 1999.
- ↑ Dudayev Vows to Crush Rebels Amid New Clashes Around Grozny, Agence France-Presse, 27 November 1994.