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The brothers behind Monday's deadly bombing at the Boston Marathon are believed
to have come to the U.S. from Chechnya as long as a
decade ago, but apparently never fit in with the American culture.I dont
have a single American friend, I dont understand them, the older brother,
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who was killed in a shootout with police hours after
the pair was identified as suspects, told a photographer in 2009.- Tamerlan
TsarnaevWhat drove him and his brother, Dzhokhar A. Tsarnaev, 19, who lived
with him in Cambridge, Mass., to perpetrate the deadly attack which
killed three people and injured 176 others is not clear. They
are believed to be Muslim and to have had military training overseas.
But the older brother, who was 26, also worked out in a
gym and dreamed of making the U.S. Olympic boxing team, according to
an online photojournalism slideshow that chronicled his training.The journalist
who created the project, Johannes Hirn, could not be reached for comment.
But one caption in his account described the family's odyssey to America.Tamerlan
fled Chechnya with his family because of the conflict in the early
90s, and lived there for years in Kazakhstan before getting to the
United States as a refugee, read the caption.Tamerlan previously studied
at Bunker Hill Community College for three semesters fall 2006, spring
2007 and fall 2008 in hopes of becoming an engineer. He
took off a semester from his studies to practice boxing at
The 2010 report said lands like Chechnya -- as well as
Pakistan and Somalia -- are seen by "jihadi theoreticians" as places where
"fighting is not only legitimate but also compulsory." The same report also
noted Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov has tried to align the insurgency
"with the global jihadist narrative," supporting the establishment of an
"Islamic emirate in the Caucasus."Whether Chechens, however, have actually
gone to the frontlines in Afghanistan and Pakistan is a matter of
fierce dispute. A Congressional Research Service report earlier this year
said "some Chechen fighters fighting alongside Taliban/Al Qaeda forces have
been captured or killed."But other studies have sharply questioned this
kind of reporting, claiming that American officials and media were buying
into a Russian narrative that Moscow was simply fighting Islamic terrorists
in Chechnya.A 2004 report from University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth
professor Brian Glyn Williams described a more complicated picture."While
it is certainly possible that Chechen individuals made their way to Afghanistan
to fight for the Taliban in Afghanistan, the complete absence of even
a single Chechen POW among the thousands captured by the Northern Alliance
and the U.S. would clearly refute the wild claims that the Chechens
formed the 'largest contingent of Al Qaeda's foreign legion'," he wrote.Williams
told FoxNews.com, rather, that "there's a jihad element that has grown large
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