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Putin, the prisoner of the Caucasus

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  • Putin, the prisoner of the Caucasus

    Putin, the prisoner of the Caucasus
    by Vladimir Rozanskij

    AsiaNews.it, Italy
    Sept 8 2004

    After the Beslan massacre, an expert analyzes where Russia and the
    West is going in the confrontation with Islamic terrorism

    Moscow (AsiaNews) - A famous novel by Pushkin tells of the dangers
    and perils that Russian travellers could expect in the early
    19th century, among the gorges and harshness of those ancient and
    mysterious lands that rise as southern guard of the Asian continent.
    The novel is entitled "The Prisoner of the Caucasus", and has never
    before seemed so prophetic of the condition in which the president
    of that very Russian state, Vladimir Putin, currently finds himself.
    His ascent to the head of government and, 5 years ago, to the Russian
    Federation itself, had in fact been conditioned by the explosion of
    terrorist bombs that had sown so many victims, not only in the lands
    of the south, but also in Moscow itself, giving a final blow to what,
    by then, was the teetering throne of Yeltsin and clearing the way
    for a new "strong man".

    Putin's leadership was subsequently confirmed, almost by acclamation,
    in the general elections of March 2000, effectively making any
    political or administrative consultation redundant: in fact, he
    and his candidates are absolutely unbeatable; theirs is the same
    cast-iron probability of the single-party candidates of Soviet memory.
    The reason for such absolute pre-eminence has always been tied
    to the deep drama of events: Russia needs to use force to resist
    the destructive attack of the forces of evil. Today as yesterday,
    the inhumane face of terror stands out against the silhouette of the
    Caucasian mountains, and calls all of Russia to unite as one person in
    its response, making its leader a banner for revival and liberation.
    Certainly, Russian citizens are ever more asking themselves why,
    after 5 long years, this dramatic issue has gone from bad to worse,
    why it has gone from destroyed homes to devastated cities in the entire
    Chechnya, in a ferocious conflict with no holds barred on both sides,
    up to the slaughter of hostages in the Dubrovka Theatre of Moscow, and
    now even the slaughter of the innocents of Beslan. Grozny, with the
    assassination of its leaders, has been a revolving door of generals,
    mediators, puppet-governments; draconian measures have been taken
    in the entire country to the point that civil liberties have been
    limited almost more than in the Soviet period. The ever-present
    police continues its surveillance and the use of violence, if not
    physical at least psychological, against any passer-by whose skin
    is in the least bit olive-tinged. Yet underground train stations
    continue to be a place of fear and mutual suspicion, when not of
    actual pain and desperation. Certainly, there has been American's
    September 11th, which confirmed what Putin himself has been saying
    since 1999: there exists a network of international terrorism that
    has declared war on advanced countries, uniting even Russia and
    America in a single axis of evil, like at the times of German Nazism.
    Wars come along in Afghanistan and Iraq, with all their contradictions
    and open questions, making Russians think that, after all, the worst
    is elsewhere, and the Americans too are able to pass themselves off
    as wicked. Yet there is no respite from dismay, there can never be
    enough force to ward off terror, a sense of resignation and anguish
    starts to take hold, there is no possible future on the horizon.
    And then Beslan, the worst of horrors, worse than the Twin Towers,
    worse than any Iraq or any Palestine, mothers that shoot at children.

    Resignation is becoming tangible not only in Russia, but in the
    entire world where, more than fighting terrorism, there are those
    who, by now, are seeking to exploit things in the name of partisan
    interests: Russia against America, France against England, the right
    against the left. The time has come perhaps to say unequivocally
    that there is no clash of civilizations underway, there is no war
    of Islam against Christianity, of the poor against the rich or of
    moderates against radicals: war is only a tragedy of men against
    men, in which the losers are but human beings, the most weak and
    defenceless. The Caucasus symbolizes this distraught world; however
    much one tries to compartmentalize reality, it is impossible in that
    land to draw the line of one against the other, of Orthodox Ossetians
    against Muslim Ingush, or Buddhist Kalmuckians, or Jewish Daghestan,
    or Gregorian Armenians. There is no limit between moderate Islam
    and international fundamentalism, between nationalist Cossacks and
    pro-American Georgians. The sociology and history of religion become
    a card game to deal out on the green table of cynical international
    politics, raising the stakes on the basis of what is convenient for
    the arms trade, the petroleum market and the poppy fields, if not
    for holding on to the petty seats of some national or continental
    parliament. Causes are invented to defend vested interests;
    recriminations are made to hide one's own lies.

    Putin's attackers are trigger happy, this is clear. A bit like
    American cowboys, they are not standing by waiting for a smoking gun:
    they prefer to shoot first. The Russian President himself has little
    faith in the search for dialogue and consensus: he grew up in the
    school of unique thought and armed peace; many shortcomings can be
    attributed to his colleague in Washington, certainly not a champion of
    multicultural tolerance. But, it is hard to imagine that others in
    their place would have done better, above all those who preach easy
    pacifism and the embrace of diversities, when the problem is losing
    one's own identity in the tragedy of a war that started long ago.
    There is no anti-Putin in Russia, there is nowhere in the world an
    anti-Bush capable of putting an end to all this horror with the shake
    of a hand and calls to mutual understanding. Putin's speech to the
    nation, following the tragedy, made his powerlessness dramatically
    clear: in promising yet another security service reform, he called
    on citizens of the Russian Federation to give proof of unity and
    solidarity. In the name of what, he was no longer able to say, nor
    was he able to put on display the anger of early days, when he would
    promise to conquer all enemies. Solidarity among people is not a
    product of promises or ideals, it needs to be lived day after day,
    bowing one's head in the face of pain, learning from wounds not to
    judge, as not to be judged; fighting evil, from whatever side it
    arrives, without professing to be the incarnation of Good. He who
    said to be so was not, in fact, a prince of the world: He was a Man
    on the cross.
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