In August 2004 Yarmuk announced the beginning of military operations in the republic. Their online manifesto rejected terrorism, referring to alleged government responsibility for the 1999
Russian apartment bombings ("We are not fighting against women or children, like Russian invaders are doing in
Ichkeria. We are not blowing up sleeping people, like
FSB of the Russian Federation does"). The manifesto noted the corruption of the "mafia clans" that led the republic ("These mere apologies for rulers, who sold themselves to the invaders, have made drug addiction, prostitution, poverty, crime, depravity, drunkenness and unemployment prosper in our Republic"). Yarmuk launched its first attack in Kabardino-Balkaria that same month, ambushing policemen in
Chegem district. A turning point came in December 2004, when Yarmuk members
conducted a raid on the office of the federal drug control agency in Nalchik, during which they seized large quantities of weapons and ammunition. The founding leader of Yarmuk, Muslim Atayev, was killed when the police stormed an apartment in Nalchik in January 2005. The organization continued to operate, staging attacks under the leadership of his successor,
Rustam Bekanov. He was killed three months later and was replaced by Anzor Astemirov, a former deputy director of the Islamic Center. The group's base of operations was Nalchik and the Balkarian enclave around
Mount Elbrus. ==Nalchik raid and aftermath==