Michael Radu of the
Foreign Policy Research Institute said "Basayev managed to radically change the world's perception of the Chechen cause, from that of a small nation resisting victimization by Russian imperialism into another outpost of the global jihad. In the process, he also significantly modified the very nature of Islam in Chechnya and Northern Caucasus, from a traditional mix of syncretism and Sufism into one strongly influenced by Wahhabism and Salafism—especially among the youth. With Wahhabism came expansionism."
1999 Basayev stayed in Grozny for the duration of the
siege of the city. His threats of "
kamikaze" attacks in Russia were widely dismissed as a
bluff.
2000 During the Chechens' retreat from Grozny in January 2000 Basayev lost a foot after stepping on a
land mine while leading his men through a minefield. The operation to amputate his foot and part of his leg was videotaped by
Adam Tepsurgayev and later televised by Russia's
NTV network and
Reuters, showing his foot being removed by
Khassan Baiev using a local
anaesthetic while Basayev watched impassively. Despite this injury, Basayev eluded Russian capture together with other Chechens by hiding in forests and mountains. He welcomed assistance from foreign fighters from Afghanistan and other Islamic countries, encouraging them to join the Chechen cause. He also ordered the execution of nine Russian
OMON prisoners on 4 April 2000; the men were killed because the Russians had refused to swap them for
Yuri Budanov, an arrested army officer accused of raping and killing an 18-year-old Chechen girl.
2001 According to the US State Department, Basayev trained in Afghanistan in 2001. The US also alleges that Basayev and
Khattab sent Chechens to serve in Al-Qaeda's "055" brigade, fighting alongside the Taliban against the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan. On 2 June 2001, it was reported General
Gennady Troshev, then-commander-in-chief of Russian forces in Chechnya, had offered a bounty of one million dollars to anyone who would bring him the head of Basayev. In August, Basayev commanded a
large-scale raid on the
Vedensky District. A deputy commander of Russian forces in Chechnya claimed Basayev was wounded in a firefight.
2002 In January 2002, Basayev's father, Salman, was reputedly killed by Russian forces. This has not been independently confirmed. Shamil's younger brother, Shirvani, was reported killed by the Russians in 2000, but is, according to numerous accounts, actually living in
exile in Turkey where he is involved in coordination of the activities of the diaspora. In May, the Russian side declared Basayev "dead". The Russian military had also made several claims about Basayev's alleged death in the past. Around 2 November 2002, Basayev claimed on a militant website that he was responsible for the
Moscow theater hostage crisis (although the siege was led by
Movsar Barayev) in which 50 Chechens held about 800 people hostage; Russian forces later stormed the building using gas, killing the Chechens and more than 100 hostages. He is regarded as the mastermind of the crisis.
2003 On 12 May 2003, suicide bombers rammed a truck loaded with explosives into a Russian government compound in
Znamenskoye, northern Chechnya, killing 59 people. Two days later a woman got within six feet of
Akhmad Kadyrov, the head of the Moscow-appointed Chechen administration, and blew herself up killing herself and 14 people; Kadyrov was unhurt. Basayev claimed responsibility for both attacks; Maskhadov denounced them. From June until August 2003 Basayev lived in the
town of Baksan in nearby
Kabardino-Balkaria. Eventually, a skirmish took place between when local policemen came to check the house he was staying in. Basayev escaped the incident. On 8 August 2003, U.S. secretary of state
Colin Powell designated Shamil Basayev as a threat to U.S. security and citizens, saying that Basayev "has committed or poses a significant risk of committing, acts of terrorism that threaten the security of U.S. nationals or the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States". In February, the U.S.
State Department designated three Chechen groups with links to
al-Qaeda, including the
Islamic International Peacekeeping Brigade, stating that
Osama bin-Laden had sent "substantial" amounts to its founders Basayev and
Ibn al-Khattab. The
United Nations Security Council also placed Basayev on its official list of terrorists after the U.S. designation. In late 2003, Basayev claimed responsibility for terrorist bombings in both Moscow and
Yessentuki in
Stavropol Krai. He said both attacks were carried out by the group operating under his command.
2004 On 9 May 2004, the pro-Russian Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov was killed in Grozny in a bomb attack for which Basayev later claimed responsibility. That explosion killed at least six people and wounded nearly 60, including the top Russian military commander in Chechnya, who lost his leg; Basayev called it a "small but important victory". Basayev was accused of commanding
the 21 June raid on
Nazran in the Russian republic of
Ingushetia. In fact, he was shown in a video made of the raid, in which he led a large group of militants. Around 90 people died in this attack, mostly local servicemen and officials of the Russian security forces including the republic's acting
interior minister. The Ministry building was burned down. In September 2004 Basayev claimed responsibility for the
Beslan school siege in which over 350 people, most of them children, were killed and hundreds more injured. The Russian government put up a
bounty of 300m
rubles ($10m) for information leading to his capture.
2005 On 3 February 2005, UK's
Channel 4 announced that it would air Basayev's interview. In response, the Russian Foreign Ministry said that the broadcast could aid terrorists in achieving their goals and demanded that the
Government of the United Kingdom call off the broadcast. The
British Foreign Office replied that it could not intervene in the affairs of a private TV channel and the interview was aired as scheduled. The same day, Russian media reported that Shamil Basayev had been killed; it was the sixth such report about Basayev's demise since 1999. In May 2005, Basayev reportedly claimed responsibility for the
power outage in Moscow. The
BBC reported that the claim for responsibility was made on a web site connected to Basayev, but conflicted with official reports that sabotage was not involved. Even though Basayev had a $10 million bounty on his head, he gave an interview to Russian journalist
Andrei Babitsky in which he described himself as "a bad guy, a bandit, a terrorist ... but what would you call them?", referring to his enemies. Basayev stated each Russian had to feel war's impact before the Chechen war would stop. Basayev asked "Officially, over 40,000 of our children have been killed and tens of thousands mutilated. Is anyone saying anything about that? ... responsibility is with the whole Russian nation, which through its silent approval gives a 'yes'." This interview was broadcast on U.S. television network
ABC's
Nightline program, to the protest of the Russian government; on 2 August 2005, Moscow banned journalists of the ABC network from working in Russia. On 23 August 2005, Basayev rejoined the Chechen separatist government, taking the post of first deputy chairman. Later this year Basayev claimed responsibility for a
raid on Nalchik, the capital of the Russian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria. The raid occurred on 13 October 2005; Basayev said that he and his "main units" were only in the city for two hours and then left. There were reports that he had died during the raid, but this was contradicted when the separatist website,
Kavkaz Center, posted a letter from him.
2006 In March 2006, Prime Minister of
Chechen Republic,
Ramzan Kadyrov, claimed that upwards of 3,000 police officers were hunting for Basayev in the southern mountains. On 15 June 2006, Basayev repeated his claim of responsibility for the bombing that killed Akhmad Kadyrov, saying he had paid $50,000 to those who carried out the assassination. He also said he had put a $25,000 bounty on the head of Ramzan, mocking the young Kadyrov in offering the smaller bounty. On 27 June 2006, Shamil Basayev was appointed by Dokka Umarov as the
Vice President of Ichkeria. On 10 July 2006, in his last statement at 1.06 pm Moscow time, Kavkaz Center quoted him as thanking the
Mujahideen Shura Council for
executing the three captured Russian diplomats in Iraq and calling it "a worthy answer to the murder by Russian terrorists from the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation of the Chechen diplomat, ex-president of CRI,
Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev". ==Death==