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Chechnya What drives the separatists to commit such terrible outrages? By Masha Gessen Posted Saturday, Sept. 4, 2004, at 3:06 PM PT
As many as 600 people, many of them children, are dead, and hundreds more are injured. The two-day hostage crisis
that ended in an 11-hour gunfight is the most horrific in a harrowing
chain of terrorist attacks in Russia. Russian officials are saying
al-Qaida did it. But the truth is far more complicated. The
current conflict in Chechnya goes back to the fall of 1991, when the
tiny republic in the Russian Caucasus declared independence. It wasn't
a crazy thing to do. The Soviet Union, which once seemed
indestructible, was falling apart (and collapsed completely by the end
of the year). Russia itself had a convoluted structure, with 89
federation members, each belonging to one of five categories (region,
autonomous region, ethnic republic, province, and two special-status
cities) with different structures and rights within the federation. The
Russian Constitution recognizes the right of federation members to
secede—and Chechnya tried to claim this right. The Chechens'
desire was perfectly understandable. As an ethnic group, Chechens had
been mistreated by the Soviet regime, and the Russian empire before it,
perhaps worse than anyone else. In 1944, the Chechens, along with
several other ethnic groups, were accused of having collaborated with
the Nazis and deported to Siberia. Their collective guilt established
by the order of Stalin, on Feb. 23, 1944, more than half a million
Chechens were forcibly herded onto cattle cars and sent to Western
Siberia. As many as half died en route, and uncounted others perished
in the harsh Siberian winter; the exiles were literally dumped in the
open snowy fields and left to fend for themselves.
The Chechens were not allowed to return home until 1976. So by the time of perestroika,
virtually all Chechen adults were people born in Siberian exile. No
wonder they didn't want to live side by side with the Russians, who had
mangled their lives. The last straw came in August 1991, when, during
the failed hard-line communist coup, rumors spread that another
deportation was in the works. Chechens overthrew their local,
Soviet-appointed leader, and elected a new president on a nationalist
platform. Russia had no intention of recognizing Chechen
independence. The Kremlin's fears were understandable: With the Soviet
Union crumbling, there was no reason the shaky Russian federation
couldn't follow. Granting independence to one region could set off a
chain reaction. What's more, an oil pipeline went through Chechnya, and
a small amount of oil was produced in the republic itself, so losing
Chechnya could have meant significant financial loss for Russia.
President Boris Yeltsin declined even to negotiate with the Chechen
separatists—a traditional Russian disdain for this Muslim people no
doubt played a role in his decision—and simply let the problem fester
for three years. By the fall of 1994, Chechnya, which had been
left to its own devices, had all the trappings of de facto sovereignty.
It had its own armed forces, small but well-trained, called the
Presidential Guard. It operated its own international airport, which
Russia seemed not to notice, and it had effectively taken control of
its oil production and exports. In October 1994, Moscow decided finally
to put things right by staging an armed uprising in Chechnya. It was
meant to look like a spontaneous rebellion of pro-Moscow Chechens, but
it was so poorly planned that it failed, and several dozen participants
were detained by the Chechens. All the supposed rebels turned out to be
ethnic Russians employed by the secret services. When the covert
operation failed, Moscow decided to use overt tactics. The Russian
defense minister at the time boasted he could take Grozny, the Chechen
capital, in two hours. The war, which began on Dec. 11, 1994, lasted
nearly two years, cost at least 80,000 Chechens and about 4,000 Russian
soldiers their lives, and ended in military defeat for Russia. In 1996,
Russia pulled its troops out of a virtually demolished Chechnya,
leaving it to fester—again. For the next three years, Chechnya, whose
infrastructure had been bombed out of existence, turned into a state
run by and for criminals. In the absence of any clear legal status for
the place or its residents, everything that happened there—from oil
exports to kidnappings—was by definition illegal. A shocking and
important event preceded the Russian pullout from Chechnya. In June
1995, a group of rebels emerged from what seemed at the time to be a
nearly defeated Chechnya and tried to take over the small Russian town
of Budyonnovsk. Dozens of armed men ended up barricading themselves in
the local hospital, where the patients, including women with their
newborns, became their hostages. Russian troops tried to storm the
building but aborted the attack quickly. In the end, Moscow negotiated
a cease-fire in Chechnya and let the terrorists get away in exchange
for the hostages' release. Immediately after Budyonnovsk, Russia
started peace negotiations with the Chechen rebels, making the hospital
siege probably the most successful act of terrorism in history. It is
also the only large-scale hostage-taking that didn't end in a storm. The
second war in Chechnya began in September 1999, following a bizarre and
brutal series of terrorist acts. Two apartment buildings in Moscow and
one in the south of Russia exploded, killing more than 300 people.
Another building, in the town of Ryazan, was de-mined in time. At the
same time, a group of Chechen rebels staged an incursion into the
neighboring republic of Dagestan, taking over several villages there
for a few weeks. In the last five years, several critics of the Putin
regime, including a former senior secret services officer, have
produced a fair amount of evidence indicating that the Russian secret
services may have instigated or even carried out some or all of these
attacks. If this were the case, it wouldn't be the first time a country
fighting a separatist movement tried to defeat it by funding a more
radical terrorist wing in the hopes of undermining the more moderate
separatists locally and discrediting them internationally. It also
wouldn't be the first time such tactics had failed. Usually, the
terrorist movements quickly take on a life of their own, and their
federal masters and funders lose control. The current Russian
regime based its popularity on its harsh response to the terrorist
attacks of 1999. Vladimir Putin, a virtual unknown who was appointed
prime minister just before the first explosions, rose to political fame
and power by taking a harsh stand and promising to bomb Chechnya into
submission. The bombing has been going on for five years, but
submission still seems unattainable. Chechen fighters have not only
continued to battle the federal powers at home but have staged a series
of increasingly shocking terrorist attacks in other parts of Russia
(although the Chechen connection is, in most cases, presumed rather
than proved). There have been explosions in Moscow and elsewhere,
including a bomb in the Moscow subway; there have been two shocking
hostage crises—over 800 people held for three days in a Moscow theater
two years ago and 1,000 or more held in the school building this week.
Russians, for their part, always seem to botch the rescue operations.
In the Moscow theater, the military part worked fine, but 129 people
died needlessly because no one had bothered to organize the medical end
of the rescue. The details of this week's bloodbath are not yet clear,
but it is obvious that it involved a military and humanistic failure on
the part of the Russians. So, what does al-Qaida and
international Islamic terrorism have to do with any of this? Probably
very little. Chechens have plenty of reason to do what they do without
outside inspiration. In addition, their tactics are very different from
al-Qaida's. Osama Bin Laden's group generally aims for maximum
casualties; the Chechens, at least when they have staged
hostage-takings, have not seemed to have that goal. Al-Qaida explicitly
targets Westerners; the Chechens, on the other hand, explicitly exclude
Westerners from their list of targets; they target Russians and
Russia-sympathizers. Finally, the Chechens' demands, when they have
made them, have always focused on the war in Chechnya to the exclusion
of any religious or international agenda. They have consistently
demanded a the withdrawal of Russian troops from Chechnya—an
unattainable goal in the current Russian political climate, but one
that may look plausible to the Chechens because it worked after
Budyonnovsk. Russian intelligence has produced little or no
evidence that al-Qaida is present in Chechnya. Russian officials
claimed that there were Arabs among the hostage-takers, but this
information has yet to be confirmed, and even if it is, it may mean
only that foreign men have come to fight on the side of
Chechens—something that has happened before and something that happens
in every conflict, whether or not a major international organization is
involved. On the other hand, it would be surprising if al Qaida had no
presence in Chechnya at all. Chechens are Muslims, and they are at war;
representatives of virtually every Islamic organization have at one
point or another sent missionaries and recruiters to the region. They
have also sent money. Researchers of al-Qaida say that, in addition to
its own organization, the terrorist network has a number of loose
affiliates, essentially freelancers, who get occasional financial
support. Most likely, some Chechen groups or individuals fall into that
category. But Russia's terrorism problem is not international
Islam. It's a war that Russia started and has continued. Because of
terrorism, this war has spread to engulf the entire enormous country. Masha Gessen is deputy editor in chief of Bolshoy Gorod, a Moscow weekly.
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