18
Total Mentions
18
Documents
816
Connected Entities
Federal subject of Russia, republic of Russia
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017904 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017934
t organized by charity Defendants TTRO, World Assembly of Muslim Youth (“WAMY”), and Al-Haramain Foundation for the benefit of Bosnia Herzegovina and Chechnya. (Ashton Compl. § 290; Burnett Compl. § 401; Federal Compl. § 461.) Finally, Plaintiffs claim that members of the Saudi royal family have assets and
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017915 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019233 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019296
he same hymnal, and most influential outlets reflected a variety of opinions about government policies, including the Kremlin's conduct of the war in Chechnya. Putin moved quickly to change these conditions. He reorganized and exerted tighter political con- trol over state-owned television stations, brough
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019250 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023361 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023415
ners as bin Laden’s organization grew and expanded its global terrorist and military operations to regions as diverse *30 as the Philippines, Bosnia, Chechnya, Kosovo, Sudan, Ethiopia, Kashmir, Somalia, Palestine, Pakistan, Yemen, Kenya, Tanzania, Egypt, Indonesia, and Malaysia.! Plaintiffs’ pleadings and
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023378 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030030 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030059
hat foreigners have the right to intervene to prevent human rights abuses in a sovereign nation. The same goes for the Russians, with their record in Chechnya. India, Brazil and South Africa are democratic countries with no need for a contingency plan to shoot their own citizens. But their colonial historie
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030043 →maim or injure persons or damage property in a foreign country is based on two allegations: first, that the websites exhorted Muslims to travel to Chechnya and Afghanistan to defend those places; and second, that classified US Navy plans relating to a US naval battle group operating in the Straits of H
Page: EFTA00031737 →EFTA00148620
as convicted of providing material support for terrorism in 2007 for sending aid to Muslim militants in conflicts in places like Bosnia, Kosovo and Chechnya in the 1990s." He "completed a prison sentence early for good behavior in 2017." But because he was stateless, he could not be deported. DO) "put h
EFTA00149562
llows a long string of assassinations and attacks on Chechen exiles in Europe, Turkey and the Middle East since 2004, when a former acting leader of Chechnya, Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, was assassinated in a car bomb attack in Doha, the capital of Qatar." Radio Free Europe (7/6, 9K) reports Austrian police a
EFTA00702008
pular demonstrations by any means it chooses, including the kinds of crimes against humanity, indeed near-genocide, that Vladimir Putin ordered in Chechnya at the turn of the century. Kissinger claimed that the Russian and Chinese governments are upholding the foundations of a world order that the Unit
EFTA00795030
s that he knew were spon- sors of al Qaeda, including IIRO, MWL, WAMY, BIF, the Saudi High Commission, Saudi Joint Relief Committee for Kosovo and Chechnya ("SJRC"), and AI Han- main. Federal Complaint 11451-52. 191 Prince Turki denies the allegations against him in a declaration prepared in concert w
EFTA00804723
same hymnal, and most influential outlets reflected a variety of opinions about government policies, including the Kremlin's conduct of the war in Chechnya. Putin moved quickly to change these conditions. He reorganized and exerted tighter political con- trol over state-owned television stations, broug
EFTA00706371
nemies. In 2004, Russian secret agents assassinated Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, a warlord and vice president of the EFTA00706395 breakaway republic of Chechnya, as he ferried his 13-year-old son down the streets of Doha and away from the mosque where they had just participated in Friday prayers. An intense
EFTA00660526
strongmen. Less than 10 years before he ordered the 2008 invasion of Georgia in order to "protect" the separatist South Ossetians, he "solved" the Chechnya problem by ordering the scorched-earth obliteration of its capital, Grozny, where more civilians were killed than at Sreberniza and Homs combined.
EFTA00684003
, because chaos in Afghanistan would threaten all of them. Moscow still sees extremism in Afghanistan as a threat to Muslim regions of Russia like Chechnya, and to the Muslim-populated former Soviet republics of Central Asia. China similarly worries that upheaval in Afghanistan could exacerbate Islamic
EFTA00686178
ss an American identity; they are all stooges of American ambassadors and agents... We've seen these crazies before, in Afghanistan. We saw them in Chechnya. We saw their 'Jihad' in Yemen, in Libya, and in Lebanon. We saw massive numbers of them in Egypt, and we saw their explosives in Jordanian hotels.
EFTA00712596
t organization with unseen but munificent benefactors, probably in Saudi Arabia. They have long acted as recruitment networks for causes in Bosnia, Chechnya, and Afghanistan during the Soviet war (1979-89). Today they have ties to the Sunni insurgents in Iraq, who in turn have ties to Iraqi refugees in
EFTA01977314
hat they possess a military solution to their political problem in Gaza? There is no way out of this militarily. Israel is not Russia, Gaza is not Chechnya and Netanyahu isn't Putin. Even if Israel were morally capable of acting like Russia, the world would not allow it. So: Is the goal to empower Ha
EFTA01840318
strongmen. Less than 10 years before he ordered the 2008 invasion of Georgia in order to "protect" the separatist South Ossetians, he "solved" the Chechnya problem by ordering the scorched-earth obliteration of its capital, Grozny, where more civilians were killed than at Sreberniza and Horns combined
EFTA01842271
ons to deal with. That has been a fundamental premise throughout the Soviet /Russian existence. Can you give a recent example? Yes. In the case of Chechnya, the Russians were extremely nervous during the initial phases of that war [1994-1996] that there'd be some sort of UN resolution that argued for a

United States
LocationCountry located primarily in North America

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017

Bill Clinton
PersonPresident of the United States from 1993 to 2001 (born 1946)

Vladimir Putin
Person2nd and 4th President of Russia (2000-2008, 2012-present), 7th and 11th Prime Minister of Russia (1999-2000, 2008-2012), Director of the Federal Security Service (1998-1999) and Deputy Mayor of Saint Petersburg (1994-1996)

Yemen
LocationCountry in West Asia

Bashar al-Assad
PersonPresident of Syria from 2000 to 2024

Lebanon
LocationCountry in West Asia

al-Qaeda
OrganizationSalafi jihadist organization founded in 1988

Tehran
LocationCapital city of Iran

Prince Andrew
PersonThird child of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (born 1960)

Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)
Kremlin
OrganizationFortified complex in Moscow, Russia

Middle East
LocationGeopolitical region encompassing Egypt and most of Western Asia, including Iran

Saddam Hussein
PersonIraqi president, army officer and Baathist politician (1937–2006)

Michael Cohen
PersonAmerican former attorney and former Republican official

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Benjamin Netanyahu
PersonPrime Minister of Israel (1996–1999; 2009–2021; since 2022)

Terje Rod-Larsen
PersonNorwegian diplomat

Osama bin Laden
PersonSaudi terrorist and co-founder of al-Qaeda (1957–2011)

Jerusalem
LocationCity in the Middle East, holy to the three Abrahamic religions