Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russian Police Corruption Seen As Major Factor In Ineffective Terror

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russian Police Corruption Seen As Major Factor In Ineffective Terror

    RUSSIAN POLICE CORRUPTION SEEN AS MAJOR FACTOR IN INEFFECTIVE TERROR PREVENTION

    Komsomolskaya Pravda, Moscow
    27 Oct 04

    A Russian paper has looked at failings in the fight against terrorism
    in Russia. It recalled that when an investigation was launched
    into how terrorists sneaked into the Dubrovka theatre in Moscow,
    it turned out that "more than 100 guardians of law from Chechnya to
    Moscow virtually turned a blind eye on their movements". This "loss
    of vigilance" sometimes was not at all for free: some policemen, who
    were about to inspect the gunmen's bags with weapons and explosives,
    received a bribe, the paper said. Bribe-taking and betrayal in the
    police ranks have been detected by prosecutors everywhere, be it
    Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetia, North Ossetia or Moscow, the paper
    said. It pointed out that the only unit in charge of antiterrorism
    in the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) is its operational
    investigation directorate, just a dozen committed operatives who
    cover the whole of the country, but "even these dedicated officers
    cannot do much without a network of agents". Today, however, for fear
    of a furious public outcry the FSB has practically discarded the
    "institution" of informers. It has become obvious, the paper said,
    that no laws, or antiterrorist commissions of all sort, or endless
    bureaucratic conferences with loud agendas can protect Russia from
    new explosions. The only way, according to the paper, is to restore
    a system of training highly qualified operatives and ensure they are
    paid well. The following is the text of the article "Not only force
    required to fight bandits" published by Russian newspaper Komsomolskaya
    Pravda on 27 October. Subheadings are as published:

    A three-million-strong army of security officials works to ensure
    security for Russian citizens. Why do they often prove helpless
    with terrorists?

    After terrorist acts in Moscow and Beslan in August and September, it
    was announced to Russians that a terrorist war was declared on them. As
    though before they never heard of bombings of houses, trains, railway
    stations and cafeterias, captures of aeroplanes, downed helicopters
    or raids by Chechen-Arab gangs in Kizlyar, Pervomayskoye, Budennovsk,
    Nazran and even Moscow. For some reason, it is specifically now that
    the authorities have started drafting yet another security doctrine
    and setting up federal and interdepartmental antiterrorist commissions,
    coordinating committees and new staffs.

    The leaders of power structures are ordered to restructure their
    work and submit to the Kremlin and Security Council new plans to
    fight terrorism. FSB (Federal Security Service), the Internal Affairs
    Ministry and Defence Ministry generals prepare new tonnes of directives
    and orders, and develop plans of new exercises. However, the ordinary
    man has only one interest in all these reforms: he wants to live
    without fearing that he may be blown up tomorrow in his bed, in a bus
    or an aeroplane. He wants to understand how a gigantic enforcement
    machine, whose operation he funds from his pocket, can be forced or
    taught to counter gangs of armed monsters or a lone shakhid (martyr,
    suicide bomber) woman. We, too, are going to try to figure it out.

    How a "five" slumped to be a "failure"

    Of all our secret services, the FSB has the most extensive experience
    in fighting terrorism. Back in the Soviet times, when it was called
    the KGB, it had to grapple seriously with this problem. In Moscow
    in 1977, a home-made bomb exploded on a train before it approached
    the Pervomayskoye station. Although the KGB did not yet have its
    own criminal institute or antiterrorism experts at that time,
    the intelligence officers quickly resolved the crime. People who
    organized and perpetrated that terrorist act were arrested, convicted
    and executed.

    Two other bombings, which were planted by the same Armenian
    nationalist group in a store on Nikolskaya Street, near Lubyanka, were
    prevented. Antiterrorism fight was assigned to one of the departments
    of the famous "Five," a KGB ideological directorate that was loathed
    by anti-party people and fought dissidents (it was apparently equated
    with terrorism back then).

    A different group of KGB foreign intelligence specialists worked
    abroad. Their job was to keep dissidents and terrorists out of the
    USSR. In 10 years, the intelligence service managed to create virtually
    from scratch an effective counterterrorist system: "TNT saboteurs"
    and hostage hunters were often apprehended at a stage when they only
    just planned their dirty deeds. Yet, in 1991 the USSR collapsed,
    and so did a system of countering terrorism.

    Books are already written on how hard some Russian politicians of
    the Yeltsin era worked to destroy the KGB. Until the late 1990's,
    the new power had been zealously reforming (or more precisely,
    ruining) the security structure, which exists in every civilized
    state. The "Five" was reduced to the small Directorate for Combating
    Terrorism, a hundred people covering the entire Russia. After the
    (Chechen rebel commander Shamil) Basayev gang took hostages in
    Budennovsk (in June of 1995), a frenzied sequence of new reforms
    came. The Antiterrorist Centre and then the Department for Combating
    Terrorism and the Directorate for Constitutional Security (political
    extremism) were established. Following the Dagestani events in 1999,
    the department and administration were merged. The Russian president
    issued a decree creating one of the FSB's most powerful departments:
    for protection of constitutional system and combating terrorism.
    But after numerous and bungled reforms, many specialists left for
    the civilian sector, while a structure that was supposed to deal day
    and night with terrorism never came into being (Alfa and Vympel do
    not count because they, like a kind of "antiterrorism ambulance",
    come into action when a terrorist act is committed).

    After the air strike on New York on 11 September 2001, the Directorate
    for Combating International Terrorism was established. Sounds pretty
    big, but "warriors" from the new structure spent most of their time
    visiting international conferences. There were some incidents,
    too. At a conference on fighting terrorism held in Saudi Arabia,
    its staffers made a loud declaration on the need to fight mercilessly
    Wahhabism. It would not be that bad if Wahhabism was not the official
    religion of the kingdom. The stunned hosts reportedly looked like they
    saw a ghost. Funny as all this sounds, the speeches for high podiums
    were written and approved in Moscow. Then, what level of personnel
    training in the country's main secret service does this testify to?

    Who covers Chechnya with a cloak and dagger?

    In fact, the only subunit in charge of antiterrorism in the FSB is
    its operational investigation directorate. Yet, it is only slightly
    more than a dozen fanatically committed operatives (covering, again,
    the entire Russia!). Most of them do not have apartments (this
    and miserable pay is why almost half of them have broken personal
    lives). Their career records include decorations for successful
    operations during missions in North Caucasus.

    But even these officers cannot do much without a network of
    agents. It is the weakest spot in FSB operations. An agent network
    is almost non-existent in Chechnya. Many Chechens who were loyal to
    "post-Dudayev" authorities and cooperated with counterintelligence
    officers were knifed together with their families.

    For the same reason, more than 100 mullahs and local officials
    were killed in recent years. Nobody hurries to secret services with
    declarations disclosing whereabouts of (Chechen separatist leader
    Aslan) Maskhadov and Basayev even for 10m dollars. The FSB Directorate
    for Chechnya is only just getting on its feet. The danger of disloyalty
    is high (information leaks have been reported all the time). The Moscow
    counterintelligence officers are forced to rely mostly on the Chechen
    Security Service, led by republic's Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov
    as his second job, and also on the Yamadayev brothers, who command
    special-purpose troops and managed to build their own networks of
    agents (although predominantly on the clan basis). The shuttle tactic
    of special composite teams in Chechnya (apart from FSB operatives,
    they include special-purpose units of the Interior Ministry Internal
    Troops) is also not very effective. Following several major leaks of
    information on planned counterterrorist operations, the "neighbours"
    have increasingly rarely shared information with each other, while
    the real joint work has been conducted mostly on paper.

    Who is bothered by the "spectre of totalitarianism"?

    In the USSR times, it was enough to call from Lubyanka to Groznyy
    to find out on the same day in what mountain village a new hunting
    rifle was purchased. If a police gun or a TNT cartridge disappeared
    in Chechnya, they were found on the following day.

    Today, a gang can spend a night in a village but the FSB Directorate
    in Groznyy will find it out only a week later. The bandits bought
    a dozen land mines in an army unit but FSB officers learned of this
    fact only half a year later.

    In the Yeltsin era, political activists liked to yell on squares about
    a certain "monster", the KGB, which wrapped up the whole country
    with its networks of squealers. Now that they have sniffed hexogen
    under their windows they shout at every corner about the "weakness"
    of the FSB, whose staff has been "castrated" to one-eighth of its
    former strength in the past 13 years! No sooner had the FSB tried
    to restore its old practice of informers, recruiting also concierges
    in houses, than some fighters for human rights again started weeping
    about the restored "spectre of totalitarianism".

    But under totalitarianism, Lubyanka could see the whole country
    almost all the way through - it was aided by more than two million
    "volunteers". Thanks to them, FSB managed to nip in the bud attempts
    on life of some party and Soviet leaders, ferret out hundreds of
    "werewolves" in government structures, foil armed attacks on industrial
    facilities and banks, and prevent many man-made catastrophes. Murders
    of people and hostage captures occurred extremely rarely.

    Today, however, for fear of a furious public outcry on the part
    of some political populists, the FSB has practically discarded the
    "institution" of informers and collaborators (even though the law
    allows and regulates such practices). Even if there are barely 50
    of them for the whole country, they do not have enough strength to
    "scan" movements in the terrorist underworld, sending alarm signals to
    intelligence officers. We do not even mention that our laws prohibit
    recruitment of agents from the criminal community.

    Following several years of the terrorist war, it has become obvious
    that neither piles of laws, nor antiterrorist commissions of all
    stripes, nor endless bureaucratic conferences with loud agendas,
    nor the most courageous Alfa or Vympel troops can protect us from new
    explosions. Nobody can replace in Russia a secret service "digging"
    deeply and silently. To this end, we should at least stop pestering
    it with endless reorganization and reforms. We should also restore
    a system of training highly qualified operatives. In addition, they
    need to be paid - well and regularly.

    "Feeding" the police

    Let us recall: after the events on Dubrovka, police officials were the
    first to demonstrate readiness for an all-out antiterror effort (it
    is police that people blamed more than anyone else for what happened:
    insufficient vigilance, insufficient checks). After the storm of the
    (Dubrovka) House of Culture, then-Deputy Internal Affairs Minister
    Vladimir Vasilyev pledged publicly: "We are now going to clean not
    only Moscow but even Russia of this filth!"

    But when an investigation was launched to find out how the terrorists
    sneaked into the Dubrovka theatre hall, the police chiefs' eyes
    nearly popped out of their heads: it turned out that more than 100
    guardians of law from Chechnya to Moscow virtually turned a blind eye
    to movements of the thugs right under their very nose. This "loss
    of vigilance" sometimes was not at all for free: some policemen,
    who were about to inspect the gunmen's bags with weapons and TNT,
    received bribes at railway stations and checkpoints and let the
    suspicious people go.

    The paid neglect was crowned with betrayal: the intelligence officers
    arrested one policeman, a senior officer of the Moscow Internal
    Affairs Main Directorate, immediately after the terrorist act. He
    passed information on details of the hostage-releasing operation
    and movements of Spetsnaz (special-purpose) troops to (leader of
    hostage-takers) Movsar Barayev's gunmen.

    Bribe-taking and betrayal in the police ranks have been detected
    by prosecutor's office investigators everywhere, be it Chechnya,
    Dagestan, Ingushetia, North Ossetia or Moscow. Most of the traitors
    wearing police uniforms have been exposed in Chechnya. On this issue,
    Akhmat Kadyrov, the late president of the republic, said once: "It
    is increasingly difficult for me to tell our policemen from masked
    saboteurs." According to investigators, it is also saboteurs who
    killed him.

    The worst thing is that all that is taking place in a republic that
    has become a hotbed of Russian terror. Of course, one can understand
    objective difficulties experienced by the Chechen authorities,
    who found themselves in a situation where it is often impossible to
    break firm family (clannish) ties between guardians of law and those
    who they fight. Our domestic experience of tackling this complicated
    problem shows that this will take a decade.

    After bandits attacked Ingushetia, the Russian Prosecutor-General's
    Office pressed terrorist complicity charges against two Ingush
    policemen. One of them, Magomed Lolkhoyev, personally helped Shamil
    Basayev himself travel around the republic by car for reconnaissance
    purposes.

    As the investigation chief, Mikhail Lapotnikov, declared, "a total of
    22 individuals have been put on a wanted list in this case and checks
    are being run on more than 60. Cases against 18 individuals have been
    sent to court." In other words, a hundred of professional cops could
    have been in the pay of terrorists? Another fact has been revealed:
    the terrorists managed to prepare as many as 10 bases on the territory
    of Ingushetia and local police were involved in their organization.

    Wrongdoers were found also in North Ossetia - and again after, not
    before a terrorist act. The Prosecutor-General's Office instigated
    criminal cases on charges of "neglect causing grave consequences"
    against Miroslav Aydarov, chief of the district internal affairs
    department for Pravoberezhnyy District; Taymuraz Murtazov, deputy
    chief for public security; and Guram Dryayev, the district internal
    affairs department chief of staff.

    Dozens of other "treason" criminal cases clearly indicate that men
    of Maskhadov and Basayev conduct effective recruitment work in the
    Interior Ministry structures in those parts as well. We cannot do
    without a thorough purge here. This is what the situation warrants:
    our "southern" police bodies are in need of reliable internal security
    structures.

    Otherwise, we will hardly manage to prevent the process of intentional
    or unintentional integration between uniformed criminals and
    terrorists. This problem becomes critical in the centre as well. It
    turned out recently that a 1.5m army of guest workers from the Caucasus
    entrenched themselves in Moscow Region not without the knowledge of
    police. Almost half of them should already be sent back to places
    of their permanent residence: these people stand on the wrong side
    of the law and law-enforcement agencies have some major complaints
    about them. But a question is: what did Interior Ministry staffers
    do before? This is exactly where the shoe pinches: some police chase
    terrorists while others cover the latter for bribes. And now we are
    surprised that caches with weapons and TNT are found right near Moscow
    every day.
Working...
X