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International News Title: IN MIDST OF WAR, UKRAINE BECOMES GATEWAY FOR JIHAD (ISIS Helps American Backed Ukraine) IN MIDST OF WAR, UKRAINE BECOMES GATEWAY FOR JIHAD BY MARCIN MAMON 02/26/2015 12:37 PM OUR BROTHERS ARE there, Khalid said when he heard I was going to Ukraine. Buy a local SIM card when you get there, send me the number and then wait for someone to call you. Khalid, who uses a pseudonym, leads the Islamic States underground branch in Istanbul. He came from Syria to help control the flood of volunteers arriving in Turkey from all over the world, wanting to join the global jihad. Now, he wanted to put me in touch with Rizvan, a brother fighting with Muslims in Ukraine. The brothers are members of ISIS and other underground Islamic organizations, men who have abandoned their own countries and cities. Often using pseudonyms and fake identities, they are working and fighting in the Middle East, Africa and the Caucasus, slipping across borders without visas. Some are fighting to create a new Caliphate heaven on earth. Others like Chechens, Kurds and Dagestanis say they are fighting for freedom, independence and self-determination. They are on every continent, and in almost every country, and now they are in Ukraine, too. In the West, most look at the war in Ukraine as simply a battle between Russian-backed separatists and the Ukrainian government. But the truth on the ground is now far more complex, particularly when it comes to the volunteer battalions fighting on the side of Ukraine. Ostensibly state- sanctioned, but not necessarily state-controlled, some have been supported by Ukrainian oligarchs, and others by private citizens. Less talked about, however, is the Dudayev battalion, named after the first president of Chechnya, Dzhokhar Dudayev, and founded by Isa Munayev, a Chechen commander who fought in two wars against Russia. Ukraine is now becoming an important stop-off point for the brothers, like Rizvan. In Ukraine, you can buy a passport and a new identity. For $15,000, a fighter receives a new name and a legal document attesting to Ukrainian citizenship. Ukraine doesnt belong to the European Union, but its an easy pathway for immigration to the West. Ukrainians have few difficulties obtaining visas to neighboring Poland, where they can work on construction sites and in restaurants, filling the gap left by the millions of Poles who have left in search of work in the United Kingdom and Germany. You can also do business in Ukraine thats not quite legal. You can earn easy money for the brothers fighting in the Caucasus, Syria and Afghanistan. You can legally acquire unregistered weapons to fight the Russian-backed separatists, and then export them by bribing corrupt Ukrainian customs officers. Our goal here is to get weapons, which will be sent to the Caucasus, Rizvan, the brother who meets me first in Kiev, admits without hesitation. ...snip.... He came because Munayev, now head of the Dudayev battalion, decided the brothers should fight in Ukraine. I am here today because my brother, Isa, called us and said, Its time to repay your debt, Rizvan says. There was a time when the brothers from Ukraine came [to Chechnya] and fought against the common enemy, the aggressor, the occupier. That debt is to Ukrainians like Oleksandr Muzychko, who became one of the brothers, even though he never converted to Islam. Muzyczko, along with other Ukrainian volunteers, joined Chechen fighters and took part in the first Chechen war against Russia. He commanded a branch of Ukrainian volunteers, called Viking, which fought under famed Chechen militant leader Shamil Basayev. Muzychko died last year in Ukraine under mysterious circumstances. ...snip... For many Muslims, like Rizvan, the war in Ukraines Donbass region is just the next stage in the fight against the Russian empire. It doesnt matter to them whether their ultimate goal is a Caliphate in the Middle East, or simply to have the Caucuses free of Russian influence the brothers are united not by nation, but by a sense of community and solidarity. ...snip... The brothers had hoped the Ukrainian authorities would appreciate their dedication and willingness to give their lives in defense of Ukrainian sovereignty, but they miscalculated. Like other branches of fighters Aidar, Azov and Donbass the government, for the most part, ignores them. Theyre armed volunteers outside the control of Kiev, and Ukraines politicians also fear that one day, instead of fighting Russians in the east, the volunteers will turn on the government in Kiev. So ordinary people help the volunteers, but its not enough. The fighters associated with the Ukrainian nationalist Right Sector get money, cars and houses from the rich oligarchs. ...snip... RIZVAN FINALLY DROVE me to see his older brother, to Isa Munayev, and his secret base located many miles west of Donetsk. Riding in an old Chrysler that Rizvan bought in Poland, we drove for several hours, on potholed and snowy roads. Rizvan had glued to the car one of the emblems of Ukraines ATO, the so-called Anti-Terrorist Operation, which includes both soldiers and volunteers in the fight against separatists. The bumper sticker allows him to drive through police traffic stops without being held up or if he is stopped, they wont demand bribes as they do from other drivers. The ATO sticker, Rizvans camouflage uniform, and a gun in his belt are enough to settle matters. Policemen salute him and wish him good luck. ...snip... On the way into the city of Kryvyi Rih, we met with Dima, a young businessman under 40 but already worth some $5 million. Hes recently lost nearly $3 million from his business in Donetsk, which has been hit hard by the war. Dima worked for Igor Kolomoisky, one of the oligarchs who had been funding Ukraines volunteer battalions. Dima and Rizvan have only known each other for a short time. Rizvan claimed Dima owed him a lot of money, although its unclear from what. Rizvan kept bothering him, threatening to blackmail him. Finally, he got $20,000 from Dima. Thats not nearly enough to support the Dudayev battalion. But Rizvan had something bigger to offer Dima: amber. Now, Dima was ready to talk. He came up with the idea to find buyers in the Persian Gulf, including wealthy sheikhs. They would like to sell an entire house of amber: furniture, stairs, floors, and inlaid stones. It only takes contacts, and Rizvan has them. The brothers from Saudi Arabia like to help the jihad in the Caucasus and the Middle East. The next day, Rizvan was behind the wheel again. The old Chrysler barely moved, its engine overheated. A mechanic with an engineering degree and experience working in Soviet arms factories connected a plastic bottle filled with dirty water to the radiator using a rubber hose. I dont know how long Ill last, Rizvan says suddenly. It depends on God. Ill probably die on this road. But I dont have any other road to take. Photos: Tomasz Glowacki Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: All, TooConservative, Vicomte13, A Pole (#0)
Again, is it not telling that, just like in Libya, Syria and other places, ISIS fights regimes the USA is hostile to?
Well, given that ISIS has Chechen leadership, you didn't think they would be friendly toward Russia, did you? The Chechens in Russia or Syria or Iraq all want to knock off Russia and they always have. So we need no murky CIA conspiracies to explain it. It is interesting that an ISIS formation is operating so openly with the Kiev regime and somehow that isn't considered news here in the States. That just confirms that the purpose of many American newspapers is not to report the news but to ensure that the actual news does not get reported. I think Obola wouldn't like it if the Slimes reported that we are aiding the Ukrainian/neo-Nazi/ISIS alliance. So it does not get reported. Ever. Therefore, it didn't happen, however well the facts may be known around the world. In this way, American mass media is more focused on not reporting certain facts than in fulfilling any expectation of honest and complete news reporting.
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