During the Qianlong period of the Qing Dynasty, he moved to the Turkutian Department of Moxi Mongolia in the lower reaches of Volga River in 1770, and decided to resist the Russian siege and return to China.
Tugu Hunbu returned to China, but a considerable number of Mongols accepted Russian rule and did not return to the East. Among them are the ancestors of Chechens.
For these Mongols, Russia tried its best to assimilate and popularize orthodox Christianity. Second, conscription, using Mongolian troops to deal with the Turkish Red Crescent Army.
The Mongols who accept the Orthodox Church are Dagestans in Russia today.
The rest of the Mongols later converted to Islam, and these Muslims are now Chechens.
Chechens' resistance to Russia never stopped.
When the Germans invaded in World War II, Chechens saw the opportunity to cooperate with the Germans, which made Stalin very angry. After the war, he severely punished Chechens and moved the Chechen nation as a whole to the Caucasus mountains.