Isn't that strange... you've missed one of the most important factors:
"The fight against injustice and it's twin nasty brother, revenge"
The Assad regime soldiers kills a 5 year old child for the crime of "political" graffiti and tells his father no to worry, he can always have another son, is the sort of thingo that drives terrorism.
Of course, such stories tend to drive terrorism, and that's why they are distributed by pro-terrorist media. Unfortunately, they drive terrorism even if they are simply media inventions. That's why media like to invent them.
If Putin had provided sound leadership for the Chechen people he wouldn't have to go to Syria to fight with them...
He has. Else, he would have to fight them in Chechnya, instead of Syria. The terrorists have gone to Syria because they have no longer any strong enough base in Chechnya.
Putin, a climate change denier, has ....
Putin does not deny climate change.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/.../vladimir-putin-climate-change-pledges-russia tried to present this last year as some change in Putin's position, quoting him in 2003 saying "that climate change could have the advantage of causing Russians to spend less on fur coats". But even this is not a denial of climate change, but a comment on its consequences for Russia, which may appear less harmful than for other states.
There is no question that ISIS has attracted fighters from across the globe. But that's not the issue. Do you not remember your assertion? You asserted that Syrian rebels represented a terrorist threat to Mother Russia.
So, thousands of Russian-speaking terrorists, well equipped and experienced, paid by the US and Saudi terrorist supporters, who have been known to support Chechen terrorists in the past too, are not a thread to Russia?
Then you said Mother Putina's brutal atrocities worked in Chechnya so they should also work in Syria.
Stop lying.
One more point, you have repeatedly failed to understand the difference between Syrian rebels and ISIS. There is a difference. There is a very big difference.
ISIS prefers a khalifat, that means, a sort of separate state as the base for expansion, Al Qaida prefers other terrorist methods, roughly, making terror everywhere without a well-defined base state.
That's a difference in the military strategy, but not a difference in the political aims. Their aim is the same, an extremist variant of the Sharia state.
And there are, of course, lots of other fighters. Usually fighters from local militias, which have, usually, signed some cooperation agreements with bigger terror groups to prevent them from robbing their villages. To separate these many local fighters from the hardcore terrorists is a main aim of what Russian and Syrian negotiators try to reach on the ground in Syria. And they reach reasonable successes in this way.
The technique: They encircle a town, and then negotiate. The proposal is that those who want to fight, as well as foreigners, go to Idlib with green busses, those who want to stay give away their weapons and receive amnesty. So, those local forces remain there, the civil war is stopped in that town, the hardcore terrorists are moved away. You see, to make a difference between moderate rebels and terrorists is the main point of the actual strategy of Syrian/Russian fighting on the ground.
In Aleppo, where this separation has been applied too, it looks like those locals who have used the amnesty are of order 3-4 000, hardcore terrorists moving to Idlib of order 6-7 000.
Lumping Syrian rebels in with ISIS as you have repeatedly done, is just flat out dishonest. But it is what you and your beloved Mother Putina have repeatedly done. Chechen figthers are not fighting with the Syrian rebels. They are fighting with ISIS and your beloved Mother Putina isn't fighting ISIS. He is fighting the rebels.
First, no, I do not confuse them. Instead, I have had a lot of fun seeing that the US officials have claimed to have hit some ISIS forces in Idlib. Then, as I have explained, there are a lot of Chechen fighters part of ISIS, in particular
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Omar_al-Shishani was even one of the most important ISIS military leaders. Others have been fighting in Latakia, as separate terror gangs as well as part of Al Nusra. In Latakia was never any big ISIS presence (even if there have been photos of Turkish grey wolfes flags peaceful together with ISIS flag) and therefore also no fighting between them. So, Chechen fighters fighting ISIS are your invention.