Federal forces Despite the initial poor showing of the government forces (for example, military helicopters were hit by
anti-tank guided missiles during a rebel raid on the
Botlikh airfield),
Moscow and
Makhachkala were able to put together an impressive fighting force. For instance, the light infantry units were partially drawn from the
Spetsnaz,
paratroopers and
naval infantry, crucial to
mountain and
counter-insurgency warfare. The government forces consisted of three main elements:
light and
air mobile infantry units able to operate in the mountains and in small ambush and assault forces; larger mechanized units to seal areas off and maintain area security; and artillery with air support elements that were able to interdict supply lines and box in the rebels. Most of the 'teeth' were drawn from regular army units, with the exception of the MVD's
Internal Troops' 102nd Brigade, the
Rus commando force and the local Dagestani
OMON. Makhachala long expected an incident of this sort, and since its OMON troops proved ineffectual in 1996 when
Chechen rebels
seized hostages in the Dagestani city of
Kizlyar, it placed a part of its scarce resources into turning this force into a small local army. The Dagestani OMON force numbered almost 1,000 men and, bar the absence of heavy armored vehicles and artillery, they were equipped as
motorised infantry; the force even had a number of antiquated
BTR-60 and
BTR-70 armoured personnel carriers, as well as heavy support weapons. At the end of 1997 the republic also began raising volunteer territorial
militia. During the emergency, its ranks of reservists and volunteers almost reached 5,000. Their training and equipment were minimal, making them little more than a home guard force. However, their motivation to defend and recapture their homes as well as intimate knowledge of the terrain made them a reliable garrison force.
Insurgent forces The insurgents proved to be a collection of
Chechen,
Dagestani and
Arab guerrillas. Estimates of the insurgent forces' strength has been estimated of being 1,500-2,000 men. While mostly experienced veterans of the
Chechen Wars and other wars, they were lightly equipped. They possessed ample supplies of small arms, support weapons, several
9M111 Fagot ATGMs,
mortars and ample ammunition but they appeared to have only two
BTR-60s, possibly captured from government forces in the first days of the attack, a single
T-12 antitank gun and a few truck-mounted
ZU-23 anti-aircraft guns to use as fire support. Their first-among-equals leader was
Shamil Basayev, Chechen rebel leader, erstwhile prime minister. Basayev's position was in many ways an ambiguous one. He was a staunch
Muslim but didn't share the extreme
Wahhabism of many of his allies; however, he strongly believed that
Dagestan and
Chechnya should be one state. Although a seasoned and wily guerrilla commander, this war saw him used as a political figurehead. His CPCD was officially charged with forming new "structures of Islamic self-government" in rebel-held areas. The brevity of the occupation and the opposition of many locals to their "liberation" meant that this was never a serious process.
Ibn al-Khattab's
Islamic International Peacekeeping Brigade formed the core of the insurgent forces, accounting for perhaps half of the rebel fighters. Having fought against the
Russians during the
First Chechen War, he went on to wage an open campaign against President
Maskhadov, whom he regarded as too close to
Moscow. Khattab concluded a marriage of political convenience with Basayev, but in effect retained operational command and a veto on political direction. The third element in the loose rebel
triumvirate were the Dagestani Islamic militants. Besides
Bagauddin Kebedov, the two key figures were
Nadir Khachilayev and
Siradjin Ramazanov. An ethnic
Lak and former leader of the Union of Muslims in Russia, Khachilayev had a long pedigree of opposition to the local regime of
Magomedali Magomedov. In 1998 he launched an abortive attempt to storm the government buildings in the Dagestani capital,
Makhachkala. Khachilayev escaped to
Chechnya where he found sanctuary with Islamist guerrilla movements, eventually forging an alliance with Khattab. Despite their Dagestani origins, he and the self-styled prime minister of 'Islamic Dagestan', Ramazanov, proved marginal, reflecting their failure to bring recruits to their side after they launched the operation. The self-proclaimed
Shura of Dagestan welcomed the "liberation" and declared an Islamic state, but proved to have relatively little authority. ==Alleged agreement between Basayev and Russian authorities to start the war==