Russian special forces take out ISIS terror boss with the help of machine gun-toting robot
Rustan Aselderov - known as Abu Muhammad - was fatally injured during the shootout in Dagestan
THIS is the dramatic moment Russian special forces 'take out' a powerful ISIS boss during a highly-coordinated raid using a weaponised robot.
Footage shows troops close in on the secret compound sheltering Rustan Aselderov - known as Abu Muhammad - and four of his brutal henchmen at the weekend.
Soldiers are seen unloading their weapons on the building before launching two explosive devices inside.
A small weaponised robotic vehicle is then seen moving in to finish the job.
The robot’s mounted machine gun blasts holes through the side of the property as soldiers secure the area.
The video has been seen by thousands online with most praising the troops for their bravery.
Another comment read: “Keep up the good work Russia – we’ll win this fight.”
Russia's FSB security service said Sunday it had killed an "emir" of ISIS in a raid in the volatile
The FSB said in a statement that "among the neutralised bandits was the head of the Caucasus region's branch of the Islamic State Rustam Aselderov, and four of his close associates."
The FSB said that 35-year-old Aselderov was involved in blasts in the southern Russian city of Volgograd which killed 34 in 2013.
He was fighting for another insurgent group at the time.
It also linked him to twin car blasts in Dagestan in 2012 that killed 14 and injured at least 120.
The FSB said he also organised a foiled attack that was to take place on Moscow's Red Square on New Year's Eve 2010 involving two female suicide bombers
The warlord pledged allegiance to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in December 2014, the first major militant to do so in the Caucasus.
ISIS named Aselderov, also known as Sheikh al-Qadari, the governor of a new Caucasus province.
ISIS has since claimed responsibility for a number of attacks on police in Dagestan.
Aselderov previously fought with the local Caucasus Emirate insurgent group, taking over as leader of its Dagestan branch in 2012.
In 2015 the US Department of State imposed sanctions on Aselderov as a "foreign terrorist fighter" after the jihadist group appointed him leader of its North Caucasus franchise.
Russia in October offered a five million ruble ($78,000) reward for information on Aselderov's whereabouts.
The FSB said a joint operation with the interior ministry had cornered Aselderov and his fighters in a private house in the city of Makhachkala, where they found "automatic weapons and a large amount of ammunition and explosives."
The Russian North Caucasus is one of the major sources of foreign jihadists fighting in Syria and Iraq.