The Security Council was formally established on 19 October 1919, including the following 19 representatives: • Ali-Hajji of Akusha • Uzun-Hajji • • Muhammad Ali Hajji • Muhammad-Qadi Rakushev • Davud Ibrahim • Alikhan Kantemir • • Zubair Temirkhanov • Bagadur Mallachikhanov • Gasanov-Effendi Effendi-zade • Abdu Samed Mursalov • Mama-Hajji • Osman Osmanov • • Yusuf Molla Magomed • Omar Effendi Makhavat • Muta Ramazanov • Mola Osman Several members of the
Russian Communist Party (Bolshevik) were part of the Security Council, and the Dagestan Regional Committee of the RCP(b) had formally lent its support to the group. Their efforts to take control of the council were complicated by
Ottoman Empire generals such as
Nuri Pasha and
Kâzım Bey, who had travelled to the Caucasus at the behest of Ali-Hajji and Uzun-Hajji to assist in fighting Russia and sought the establishment of pro-Ottoman puppet states in the North Caucasus. Within its first days, the Security Council's controlled territory increased from the Dargin District to include the
Kazi-Kumukh and
Kaitag-Tabasaran districts. By the end of October, it was receiving medical, financial, and diplomatic support from the
First Republic of Armenia, the
Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, and Democratic Republic of Georgia. A six-month mobilisation of all men between 20 and 40 was announced, and the Security Council's military wing, the "People's Army of Freedom", was established. The oath of the People's Army of Freedom was as follows: The Security Council was also supported by the
Allies of World War I. The United States government's
American Committee for Relief in the Near East provided humanitarian aid to the council, and Italy, France, and the United Kingdom all provided diplomatic backing to the Security Council as the legitimate government of the Northern Caucasus.
Communist takeover and dissolution At the second session of the Security Council on 7 February 1920, the Bolsheviks took control. The Ottoman officers were dismissed and forced to leave, while Ali-Hajji was himself replaced as leader by communist revolutionary . Fifteen members of the council were removed, with Djelal ed-Din Korkmasov and
Boris Sheboldayev being added in their place. The
11th Red Army conquered the Northern Caucasus in late March 1920. Following this, the Security Council was reorganised into the
revolutionary committee of Dagestan on 11 April 1920. Korkmasov was appointed as chairman of the revolutionary committee, with Safar Dudarov as his deputy. == Notes ==