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Analysis: Russo-Chechnya war escalates

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  • Analysis: Russo-Chechnya war escalates

    United Press International
    September 24, 2004 Friday 12:58 PM Eastern Time

    Analysis: Russo-Chechnya war escalates

    By RICHARD SALE


    The massacre at the Beslan school that killed hundreds, including
    more than 170 children, was a locally directed operation and not an
    al-Qaida terrorist plot, U.S. intelligence officials said.

    For 52 hours, 33 attackers held hostage 1,100 teachers and children.

    The massacre began when a terrorist explosive went off, apparently by
    accident, and Russian Alpha Special Forces rushed the school as
    terrorists began shooting hostages and detonating explosives,
    according to several newspaper accounts.

    According to U.S. government sources, the operation was set up by
    Shamil Basayev, who was trained in an al-Qaida terror camp and who at
    one time had a close relationship with terrorist mastermind Osama bin
    Laden, an account confirmed by bin Laden expert, Rohan Gunaratna.

    Gunaratna, in his book, "Inside al-Qaida," noted that shortly before
    the Soviet Union collapsed al-Qaida set up an office in Baku and
    supported the Azeri mujahidin in their war against Christian Armenia
    for control of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave from 1988 to
    1994.

    When war broke out between Russia and Chechnya in 1994, Basayev
    emerged as the most capable military commander, U.S. government
    officials said.

    Several U.S. intelligence sources have said that al-Qaida's major
    involvement in Russia began in December 1994, when a former Soviet
    Air Force general, Jokar Dudayev, began a movement for an independent
    Chechnya.

    Gunaratna confirmed this, adding that a series of terror bombings in
    Russia began not long after.

    But in spite of the al-Qaida connections, this latest school massacre
    was not authorized or supervised by bin Laden or elements of
    al-Qaida, in spite of statements to the contrary by Russian
    officials, U.S. officials said.

    "It was not an al-Qaida operation, nor is Chechnya a major theater
    for al-Qaida," according to Stephen Blank, an Army War College
    terrorism expert.

    But U.S. intelligence officials told United Press International that
    the targeting of non-Muslim children, along with the recent blowing
    up only a week earlier of two Russian airliners "represents a
    definite escalation," in the Russian-Chechnya war.

    Blank agreed: "The targeting of non-Muslim children is a very
    sinister development."

    North Ossetia where the school is located, is predominantly Christian
    and usually allied to Moscow, he said.

    Since Aug. 24, Russia has been hit by four terrorist strikes,
    resulting in the deaths of about 450 innocent civilians, according to
    B. Raman, former senior official of India's intelligence service.

    The children were being used as hostages to wrest certain concessions
    from the Russian government, U.S. government officials said.

    There were 90 deaths from the two Russian aircraft blown up on Aug.
    24 by "black widows," or Chechen women, who stood in the rear part of
    the aircraft or were in the bathroom, when they detonated their
    explosives, Blank said.

    Ten persons were killed when another Chechen woman blew herself up
    outside the entrance to a Metro station.

    "All of this implies a high level of planning and coordinated
    activity," said former CIA counterterrorism chief Vince Cannistraro.

    Cannistraro explained that the Chechen female suicide bombers were
    called "black widows" because so many Chechen women have lost
    husbands or fathers or other male members of their families to
    Russian attacks.

    "Chechnya has a large pool of these women to draw on," he said.

    In the Beslan massacre some of the attackers were Ingush, from a
    nearby statelet known to be "a hotbed of radical Islamists,"
    Cannistrro said.

    A former senior CIA official said that the explosives used in Beslan
    were believed to have traveled to the Beslan through Ingushetia.

    "The Russians have played this czarist game of empire, divide and
    rule and has allowed a whole group of corrupt little statelets to
    form out of Georgia," said Blank.

    The result is that terrorists move easily back and forth over
    Russia's borders, weakening its security, he said.

    Ariel Cohen, a Caucasus expert at the Heritage Foundation, told UPI
    some time ago: "The whole Russian-Chechen war is a nightmare. There
    are plenty of side deals between the Chechens and Russian military,
    the latter easily bribed into selling the Chechens weapons and
    explosives."

    Blank went even farther: "The Chechens would not survive without the
    support they get from the Russian army. That army is notoriously
    corrupt."

    Fiona Hill, Chechen expert at the Brookings Institution, agreed,
    adding: "The Chechens even have sympathizers inside the FSB" (the
    Russian internal security service.)

    She added that the Russian military is involved in criminal
    operations involving "drug smuggling, prostitution, exchanging
    weapons with Chechens for profit."

    To this list Blank added: "the widespread smuggling of drugs,
    contraband, explosives, and nuclear materials."

    Said Hill: "The Russian army "has helped to fund and prolong the war
    by capitalizing on it. It's a total failure of Russian political
    governance."

    Blank said that the airport security guard who allowed the two
    Chechen women to board the aircraft they destroyed did so after
    accepting a bribe of $34. "I mean, I've heard of cheap -- but $34?"
    he said.

    The continuing violence has killed a number of behind-the-scenes
    diplomatic initiatives to try and end the Chechen war for secession,
    Hill said.

    The first series had been halted by 2002, when Chechen terrorists
    took 600 hostages at a Moscow theater, she said.

    The Moscow theater assault of October, 2002, was alarming because it
    meant Chechens were targeting foreigners for the first time.

    According to U.S. officials, the Bush administration has offered
    Russia intelligence, technology and specialist support.

    But the State Department is "resolutely opposed" to any Russian
    military action that targets the state of Georgia.

    To Blank, one of the most dangerous aspects of this war is that it
    can spread, "and it has already begun to spread."

    "It could swallow most of Russia if it gets out of hand," a U.S.
    government official said.

    The solution? A Russian cleanup of its security services, Blank said.

    "The violence will go on unless there is fundamental reform of the
    entire Russian security sector. There has to be comprehensive
    reform," he said.

    "As it is, Moscow cannot defend Russian security and they can't
    effectively project power beyond Russia's borders until this
    (cleanup) happens," he said.
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