Islamic State – Caucasus Province | |
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الدولة الإسلامية - ولاية القوقاز(ad-Dawlah al-Islāmiyah – Wilayah al-Qawqaz) Вилаят Кавказ Исламского государства(Vilayat Kavkaz Islamskogo gosudarstva) | |
![]() Logo of Caucasus Province | |
Leaders |
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Dates of operation | 23 June 2015 (2015-06-23)[1] – present |
Active regions | RussianNorth Caucasus |
Ideology | |
Part of | ![]() |
Opponents | State opponents Non state opponents |
Battles and wars | |
Flag | ![]() |
TheIslamic State – Caucasus Province[note 1](IS-CP)[1] is a branch of the militant Islamist groupIslamic State (IS), that is active in theNorth Caucasus region ofRussia. IS announced the group's formation on 23 June 2015 and appointedRustam Asildarov as its leader.[2][3] Although it was defeated militarily as an organized force by 2017, somelone wolves still act on behalf of the Islamic State. This province does not have a current leader along with theTurkey,Azerbaijan andPhilippines branches.[4][5]
Starting in November 2014, mid-level commanders of theCaucasus Emirate militant group began publicly switching their allegiance from Emirate leaderAliaskhab Kebekov to IS leaderAbu Bakr al-Baghdadi, following al-Baghdadi and his group's declaration of acaliphate earlier in the year.[6] By February 2015, many commanders of the Emirate's branches in Chechnya (Vilayat Nokhchicho) and Dagestan (Vilayat Dagestan) had defected.[6][7] Kebekov and senior loyalists within the Emirate released statements denouncing them, and accused the most senior defector, Rustam Asildarov, of betrayal.[8][9] Further pledges of allegiance to al-Baghdadi occurred in June 2015 byVilayat Nokhchicho leaderAslan Byutukayev,[10] and in an audio statement purportedly made by militants inDagestan,Chechnya,Ingushetia, andKabardino-Balkaria.[11]
On 23 June 2015, IS's spokesmanAbu Mohammad al-Adnani accepted these pledges and announced the creation of a new Wilayah, or Province, covering the North Caucasus region. Adnani named Asildarov as the IS leader of this area and called on other militants in the region to follow him.[12][13]
The group claimed responsibility for its first attack, on a Russian military base in southern Dagestan, on 2 September 2015.[14] In a video also released in September, Asildarov called on IS supporters in the Caucasus to join the fight there, rather than travel to Iraq and Syria.[15]
On 4 December 2016, Russian security services reported that they had killed Asildarov and four of his associates in a raid on a house inMakhachkala.[16]
On 18 February 2018, a 22-year-old man opened fire on a church inKizlyar, killing 5 and injuring 5. The attacker was later killed by security forces and a video later emerged of the attacker pledging allegiance to the Islamic State, while the Islamic State also claimed responsibility.[17]
On 20 August 2018, multiple young militants attacked a police station in Grozny with knives and injured at least 7 police officers. All attackers were killed; the Islamic State claimed responsibility.[18]
In early January 2019, the group claimed responsibility for the2018 Magnitogorsk building collapse, and an attack the following day. The group said that the building collapse was caused by bombings. The claim was, however, dismissed by some Russian investigators, who said that the cause of the building collapse was most likely a gas leak.[19]
On 25 January 2019, a group of policemen were attacked by a gunman, in the settlement of Sernovodskoye (Kursky district), causing the injuries of two policemen. The policemen fired back, killing the attacker, whose body was later found next to a Kalashnikov in a forest. The Islamic State group later claimed responsibility for the attack.[20][21]
On 12 April 2019, in an extensive operation involvingAlpha Group, local police andRosgvardia, 2 heavily armed IS militants were killed in the city ofTyumen. These militants were planning to attack the city's public places.[citation needed]
On 23 June 2019, a knife-wielding militant attacked two police officers just outsideRamzan Kadyrov's residence inGrozny. The assailant was then killed by the police. A hunting rifle was reportedly found in his car. The Islamic State group later claimed responsibility for the attack.[22]
On 2 July 2019, a law enforcement officer was killed and several others injured at a checkpoint on the outskirts of Bamut when a militant managed to attack police officers with a knife and a hand grenade. The Islamic State group later claimed responsibility for the attack.[23]
On 21 January 2021, Aslan Byutukayev and five other IS militants were killed in Chechnya.[24]
After 2021, the group's fate is unknown. With theRussian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the organization became leaderless.
March 2-3 2024 (2024 Karabulak clash), was a deadly stand-off between Russian security services and a cell ofIngush militants affiliated with Islamic State.[25]
In April 2024, Vilayat Kavkaz (sector Ingushetia) released an audio message regarding the situation of the group, according to them the group is getting stronger, bigger and more active. The group is trying to choose a leader after 2021.[26]
On 22 April 2024, suspected IS gunmen attacked a Russian police patrol in the town ofKarachayevsk in Russia’s North Caucasus republic ofKarachayevo-Cherkessia, killing 2 police officers and wounding a third, in addition to seizing their service weapons (a pistol and rifle) and some ammunition.[27]
On 28 April 2024, suspected IS gunmen attacked a Russian police post in the village of Mara-Ayagy of the Karachay-Cherkess Republic, driving up to the police post before throwing explosives and opening fire, killing 2 police officers and wounding at least 4 others. All of the attackers were allegedly killed during the attack.[28]
On 22 November 2017, three suspected militants of IS, were killed in a raid on aflat/apartment in Tbilisi, Georgia.The raid killed 3 IS Militants, and arrested one, while SSSG suffered 4 wounded men, and later 1 death in a hospital. According to the Georgian security officials, the group planned to carry out terror attacks against foreign diplomatic missions inGeorgia andTurkey.[29]
In May 2022,Tbilisi City Court convicted five individuals who had been arrested in August 2021 for membership in IS and plans to travel to a terrorist camp in Syria. In December,State Security Service of Georgia detained Tsiskara Tokhosashvili, the brother of IS commander Tsezar Tokhosashvili, on charges of joining IS and assisting terrorist activities inSyria andIraq.[30]
In late 2022, the Georgian State Security Service on Thursday announced the arrest of a member of the Islamic State terrorist organisation atTbilisi International Airport by its Counter-Terrorism Centre. His younger brother Tsezar Tokhosashvili, known as Al-bara Shishani, was arrested in a joint special operation inKyiv,Ukraine in November 2019 and wasextradited to Georgia the following year. Wanted through anInterpol red notice on terrorism charges, he also joined IS in 2015.[31]
On 6 June 2024, the Georgian State Security Service detained andarrested two militants affiliated with IS along with a cache of weapons in the city ofBatumi.[32]
On 20 February 2025, the Security Service of Georgia conducted operations against militants affiliated with IS. As a resultRG-42 grenades,F-1 grenades,explosives,detonators, UZRGM fuzes,AK-74 Bakelite magazines and5.45x39mm ammunition was captured from the raid.[33]
On 2 July 2019, as part of a series of videos showing supporters and fighters of IS around the world renewing their pledge of allegiance to IS, a video was published fromAzerbaijan featuring three fighters armed with Kalashnikov style rifles pledging their allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. The video was formally released by IS.[34]
4 months later, after al-Baghdadi'sdeath on 27 October 2019,Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurashi received pledges of allegiance (bayah) from various provinces and regions, with photos of fighters from Azerbaijan pledging allegiance to him, on 29 November.[35]
On 19 September, 2024, the Islamic State claimed its first-ever attack in Azerbaijan, via its weeklyAl-Naba newsletter, claiming to have killed 7 Azeri security personnel and wounded 1 in a clash in Qusar district, Northern Azerbaijan, five days prior; one IS militant was killed.[36][37]
IS-CP was designated as aSpecially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) organization by theUnited States on 29 September 2015; Aslan Byutukaev was listed as a SDGT individual on 13 July 2016.[38]
ISIS's spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani declared the creation of a new wilayat, or governorate, in the North Caucasus region of Russia on June 23, 2015. Al-Adnani named 'Abu Mohammad al-Qadari' the leader of the group, and congratulated 'the soldiers of the Islamic State' in the Caucasus.
We testify that all Mujahideen of the Caucasus—in the Velayats of Nokhchiycho [Chechnya], Dagestan, Galgaicho [Ingushetia] and KBK [Kabarda, Balkaria and Karachay]—are united in their decision and we do not have differences among ourselves.
Baghdadi, the 'Emir of the Faithful', has 'accepted your bayat and has appointed the noble sheikh Abu Muhammad al Qadarī as Wali [or governor] over [the Caucasus]', Adnani says.