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Putin Tells the Russians: 'We Shall Be Stronger'

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  • Putin Tells the Russians: 'We Shall Be Stronger'

    Putin Tells the Russians: 'We Shall Be Stronger'
    By THE NEW YORK TIMES

    New York Times, NY
    Sept 4 2004

    OSCOW, Sept. 4 - Following is a transcript of President Vladimir V.
    Putin's televised remarks at the Kremlin on Saturday night, as
    translated by The New York Times:

    It is a difficult and bitter task for me to speak. A horrible
    tragedy happened in our land. During these last few days, each one
    of us suffered immensely, having all that happened in the Russian
    city of Beslan run through our hearts. We were confronted not just
    by murderers, but those who used their weapons against defenseless
    children.

    In the first place, I am addressing today those who lost the dearest
    in their life, their children, their kin, their closest. I want you
    to remember all those who died at the hands of terrorists in the last
    few days.

    There have been many tragic pages and difficult trials in the
    history of Russia. Today we are living in conditions formed after
    the disintegration of a huge, great country, the country which
    unfortunately turned out to be nonviable in the conditions of rapidly
    changing world.

    Today, however, despite all difficulties, we managed to preserve the
    nucleus of that giant, the Soviet Union. We called the new country
    the Russian Federation.

    We all expected changes, changes for the better, but found ourselves
    absolutely unprepared for much that changed in our lives. The question
    is why. We live in conditions of a transitional economy and a political
    system that do not correspond to the development of society. We live
    in conditions of aggravated internal conflicts and ethnic conflicts
    that before were harshly suppressed by the governing ideology.

    We stopped paying due attention to issues of defense and security. We
    allowed corruption to affect the judiciary and law enforcement
    systems. In addition to that, our country, which once had one of the
    mightiest systems of protecting its borders, suddenly found itself
    unprotected either from West or East.

    It would take many years and billions of rubles to create new, modern
    and truly protected borders. But even so, we could have been more
    effective if we had acted in timely and professional fashion. We have
    to admit that we failed to recognize the complexity and danger of the
    processes going on in our own country and the world as a whole. At any
    rate, we failed to react to them adequately. We demonstrated weakness,
    and the weak are beaten.

    Some want to tear off a big chunk of our country. Others help them
    to do it. They help because they think that Russia, as one of the
    greatest nuclear powers of the world, is still a threat, and this
    threat has to be eliminated. And terrorism is only an instrument to
    achieve these goals.

    As I have said on many occasions, we have faced crises, rebellions
    and terrorist acts many times. But what has happened now -
    the unprecedented crime committed by terrorists, inhuman in its
    cruelty - is not a challenge to the president, the Parliament or the
    government. This is a challenge to all of Russia, to all our people.
    This is an attack against all of us.

    Terrorists think that they are stronger, that they will be able to
    intimidate us, to paralyze our will, to erode our society. It seems
    that we have a choice: to resist or to cave in and agree with their
    claims; to give up and allow them to destroy and to take Russia apart,
    in hope that eventually they would leave us alone.

    As president, as the head of the Russian state, as a man who gave
    an oath to protect the country and its integrity, as a citizen
    of Russia, I am convinced that in fact we do not have any choice,
    because as soon as we allow ourselves to be blackmailed and to panic,
    we shall immerse millions of people in a series of bloody conflicts,
    similar to Karabakh, Trans-Dnestria and other well known tragedies.

    We cannot but see the evident: we are dealing not with separate acts of
    intimidation, not with individual forays of terrorists. We are dealing
    with the direct intervention of international terror against Russia,
    with total and full-scale war, which again and again is taking away
    the lives of our compatriots.

    All the world's experience shows that such wars do not end quickly.
    In these conditions, we simply cannot, we should not, live as
    carelessly as before.

    We must create a more effective security system, and demand from our
    law enforcement agencies actions adequate in level and scale to the
    new threats.

    But what is more important is a mobilization of the nation before the
    general threat. Events in other countries prove that terrorists meet
    the most effective rebuff where they confront not only the power of
    the state but also an organized and united civil society.

    Dear fellow citizens, those who sent terrorists to commit this horrible
    crime had the goal of setting our peoples against one another, to
    intimidate citizens of Russia, to unleash a bloody feud in the North
    Caucasus. In this connection, I would like to say the following:

    First, in the near future, a complex of measures aimed at strengthening
    the unity of our country will be prepared.

    Second, I consider it necessary to create a new system of forces and
    means for exercising control over the situation in the North Caucasus.

    Third, it is necessary to create an affective crisis management system,
    including entirely new approaches to the work of law enforcement
    agencies.

    I would like to stress that all these measures will be implemented
    in full accordance with the Constitution.

    Dear friends: Together we live through very hard, mournful hours. I
    would like to thank all those who demonstrated patience and civic
    responsibility. We shall always be stronger than they, by our morale,
    courage and our humane solidarity.

    One could see it today and the night before. In Beslan, soaked
    with pain and grief, people expressed even more care and support to
    each other and were not afraid of jeopardizing their lives for the
    sake of the lives and safety of others. Even in the most inhuman
    conditions, they remained human. It is impossible to reconcile the
    pain of the losses. The trial has brought us even closer together,
    made us re-evaluate many things. Today, we have to be together. Only
    thus we shall defeat the enemy.
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