Ramzan Kadyrov treats his unique relationship with the Kremlin as a sort of family crest. His status may be less and less special, but the Chechen leader has an image to maintain.
Vadim Dubnov is an independent journalist and expert on the Caucasus.
Ramzan Kadyrov treats his unique relationship with the Kremlin as a sort of family crest. His status may be less and less special, but the Chechen leader has an image to maintain.
Despite Ramzan Kadyrov’s attempts to retain his special status, the old ways of doing business between Grozny and Moscow are over—and the new contract is here to stay.
Even as confrontation deepens between Russia and the West in other parts of the post-Soviet space, the Karabakh conflict has its own logic and still compels the geopolitical rivals to work together.
The latest friction between Chechnya’s Ramzan Kadyrov and Moscow’s siloviki was not an attack intended to unseat Kadyrov. It was not even a conflict per se. Instead, it was an attempt to reformat Moscow’s approach to Chechnya. The contract with Kadyrov isn’t being annulled; it’s just being rewritten before its next extension.