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As Russia seethes, 2 Chechen rebels are marked men

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  • As Russia seethes, 2 Chechen rebels are marked men

    The Boston Globe
    September 26, 2004, Sunday THIRD EDITION

    AS RUSSIA SEETHES, 2 CHECHEN REBELS ARE MARKED MEN

    ALLEGED LEADER OF BESLAN ATTACK FACES $10M BOUNTY

    By Anna Dolgov, Globe correspondent

    MOSCOW Russia trained Shamil Basayev to fight fires, but he has made
    a career igniting them.

    As a firefighter, he served an unremarkable two-year term in the
    Soviet military after he was drafted. As a rebel warlord in Chechnya
    after the Soviet collapse, he hijacked planes, seized hostages, and
    led guerrilla raids. He has spent a decade terrorizing the country,
    and now Russia has put a $10 million bounty on his head.

    The target of that hunt is a balding 39-year-old man with a disheveled
    beard, an admiration for Che Guevara, and a penchant for camouflage
    uniforms, black hats, and berets. He has claimed responsibility for
    nearly every major terrorist attack that has shaken Russia, most
    recently the hostage-taking raid on a school in the town of Beslan
    this month that killed more than 330 people.

    Along with Basayev, Moscow has offered an equal award for the
    capture or death of a man it says is Basayev's boss, Aslan Maskhadov,
    Chechnya's fugitive separatist president.

    Russian officials say Maskhadov has little control over rebel groups,
    such as Basayev's. But in President Vladimir Putin's view, all Chechen
    rebels are terrorists, and government officials insist that Basayev
    and Maskhadov are two sides of the same coin.

    They "are in the same boat and are playing good cop and bad cop,"
    Major General Ilya Shabalkin, spokesman for Russian forces in Chechnya,
    Russian news agencies quoted him as saying. "The good one is Maskhadov,
    and the bad one is Basayev. Maskhadov is supposedly kind and is
    distancing himself from terrorist attacks, while Basayev is claiming
    responsibility for them."

    Maskhadov's main offense of late, in Russia's view, was his comment
    published this summer in newspapers in the former Soviet republic
    of Georgia. He said that "as long as Russian policies in the north
    Caucasus region continue in the form they have now, terrorist attacks
    cannot be avoided."

    Maskhadov's remark "is a straightforward instigation to terrorism,
    if not a statement that he directed it," Russian Foreign Minister
    Sergei Lavrov said recently.

    One view that Russia's two most-wanted men share is placing the
    ultimate blame for terrorist attacks on Moscow. Where Maskhadov's
    rhetoric is calm, Basayev's is ferocious.

    He called Putin a "bloodsucker from the Kremlin." He accused the
    Russian president of ordering troops to storm the school in Beslan and
    killing hundreds of children, parents, and teachers "to satisfy his
    imperial ambitions." He promised more of the same if Russian troops
    don't pull out from Chechnya.

    They have pulled out once before. Russia signed a peace deal with
    Maskhadov in 1996, ending the first war in Chechnya and giving the
    republic de facto independence.

    For the three years that followed, gangsters roamed Chechnya, children
    picked up Kalashnikov submachine guns and played guerrilla fighters,
    and kidnappings for ransom became a popular business enterprise.

    Russian troops returned after Basayev led a raid on the neighboring
    region of Dagestan, and after a series of apartment-building bombings
    in 1999, blamed on rebels, killed about 300 people in Moscow and
    other cities.

    By then, Basayev had resigned from all posts in Maskhadov's government
    and led his followers in a guerrilla war against Russia. This was a
    trade Basayev says he has studied for years, with more success than
    he earned in civilian professions.

    After his stint as a firefighter in the Soviet Army, Basayev was
    admitted to a Moscow college in 1987 to train in land development. He
    either quit or was thrown out for poor grades a year later. He tried
    working for a small trading business.

    He preferred razing property to developing it and said he turned to
    Russian military manuals.

    "I began studying because I had a goal," he told a Russian newspaper
    at the close of the first Chechen war. "We were a group of about 30
    guys, and we knew that Russia won't let Chechnya go just like that,
    that freedom had to be paid for in blood."

    At first, it included Basayev's own blood. He was wounded about a
    dozen times and lost a foot after stepping on a land mine during a
    rebel pullout from the Chechen capital, Grozny, in 2000.

    The first horror stories about Basayev began to spread when he led a
    raid on a Georgian province in 1992, and his fighters were rumored to
    have been seen playing soccer with the severed heads of their enemies.

    Basayev led rebels to storm a KGB building in southern Russia in 1991,
    hijacked a plane to Turkey later that year, and, according to various
    accounts, fought against ethnic Armenians in a separatist enclave of
    Azerbaijan or trained in guerrilla camps in Afghanistan.

    Last year, the UN Security Council put Basayev on its official
    terrorist list, and Washington named him a threat to the United
    States. After Basayev claimed responsibility for the raid in Beslan,
    US Deputy Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage called him "inhuman"
    and "not worthy of existence."

    Commanders of pro-Moscow forces in Chechnya say they believe Maskhadov
    and Basayev are hiding in the rebellious republic. They don't explain
    how a man with a face familiar to every Russian has managed to elude
    capture in a small region that Russian forces claim to have fully
    under control.

    Maskhadov and Basayev "bring more harm to the people than hundreds of
    other militants together, and that's why their days are numbered,"
    Sultan Satuyev, deputy interior minister in Chechnya's pro-Moscow
    administration, told reporters.

    But then, Moscow had claimed to be even closer to defeating Basayev
    in the past. It had reported him dead several times.
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