Battle of Grozny (March 1996)
3rd Grozny
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Second Battle of Grozny, also known as Operation Retribution, was a three-day surprise attack by Chechen fighters who stormed the capital city of Grozny that was occupied by Russian Armed Forces.
| Second Battle of Grozny | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of the First Chechen War | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
|
|
| ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
|
| ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| Unknown |
Russian military: 150 to 1,500 fighters[1] Unofficial data: 130–150 fighters[2] | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
|
Official figure: 110–200 soldiers killed[1][3] Hundreds wounded[1][3] Unknown missing[1] |
Russian claim: 190 fighters killed[1] | ||||||
Background
By June 1995 the Chechens had lost all the major cities and towns. On General Aslan Maskhadov's orders, the Chechen resistance shifted from conventional warfare to guerrilla warfare, relying on the mountains.[4]
Battle
On March 6, 1996, Chechen fighters launched a surprise attack on Grozny, striking from three directions and encircling outlying Russian posts and local pro-Moscow Chechen police stations, catching Russian troops off guard, inflicting significant losses, overrunning much of it and capturing weapons and ammunition stores. The attack was supposedly intended to show that the Chechens could still operate against Russian forces.[5]
Aftermath
Three days later, after the Chechens left the city, fighting in the Grozny continued for several more days; the Russian units that entered Grozny periodically engaged in battle with one another, mistaking each other for the enemy.[1]
President Dzokhar Dudayev allegedly called the attack a "little harassing operation". The attack was only a rehearsal for a much larger operation that took place in August 1996.[5]