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  • The making of a tragedy

    The making of a tragedy
    BY A. C. Grayling

    The Times (London)
    September 11, 2004, Saturday

    When the Soviet Union disintegrated amid the confusion of the
    anti-Gorbachev coup in 1991, some territories in its southern
    regions made successful bids for independence, among them Armenia and
    Georgia in the Transcaucasus, and Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan in central
    Asia. Most were latecomers to the Russian fold, being Tsarist conquests
    of the 19th century. For the inheritors of the defunct Soviet empire
    their independence was deeply unwelcome, because they are rich in
    natural resources, chief among them that substance whose toxic pall,
    paid for by so many human lives, lies dark across the world: oil.

    Exactly seven years before this week of endless Beslan funerals -on
    September 9, 1997 -an agreement was signed between Russia and Chechnya
    allowing oil to flow to the Russian port of Novorossiisk on the Black
    Sea. It officially ended the first Chechen war, and gave the key to
    why the conflict had happened. Some commentators claimed at the time
    that world thirst for oil had been instrumental in bringing relative
    calm not just to Chechnya but also to the whole region. Into this
    volatile terrain were pouring hordes of businessmen and criminals,
    scarcely distinguishable from each other, eager to profit from Caspian
    oil, Turkmenistan gas, Uzbekistan cotton and Kirgiz gold.

    Peace had come, the commentators continued, because the region offered
    such rich opportunities that war could no longer be tolerated.

    To say that this uncontrolled dash for the region's resources had
    brought peace was like saying that a fire had been extinguished
    by dousing it with petrol. As American and European interests in
    the region burgeoned, Russia strove to maintain its grip on those
    parts of the original Soviet possessions which had not escaped into
    independence. In particular, the Chechen oil pipeline -the only one
    taking Caspian oil to the Black Sea -was vital, so in December 1994
    the Russian army responded to Grozny's efforts at independence by
    invading, to assert Moscow's control over the pipeline and, therefore,
    the region's economy.

    The frightful war that followed, its re-ignition in 1999, the
    excoriating terrorism that has spiralled from it, might have been
    predicted from a single fact alone: the maze of animosities that
    history and religion have between them bred, from the old Ottoman
    borders in the Transcaucasus to the pass of Jiayuguan at the western
    end of China's Great Wall. It would take an epic to do it justice,
    embracing as it must the Ottoman genocide of the Armenians in 1915
    -in which over a million and a half were murdered -and then, working
    eastwards in space and back through time, to the destroyer Genghis
    Khan, who put whole cities to the sword.

    For a flavour -a mere taste -of the complexities, note this: the
    Georgians are Caucasians and speak a South Caucasian language,
    but the Ossetians are Indo-Europeans, descended from the Alans and
    related to Persians. The Ossetians practise Islam, Christianity and
    paganism, and are involved in territorial disputes with Georgians and
    the Ingush. Ossetians are allied with Russia, Georgians are not. Most
    Georgians are Orthodox Christians, although some minorities in Georgia
    are Muslim.

    And so on. This passage comes from an internet letter disputing
    a version of Caucasian history in which the collaboration of
    Chechens with Hitler against Stalin (Hobson's choice!) is offered
    as justification for Russian attitudes to Chechnya. According to
    the letter writer, the author of the anti-Chechen history does not
    understand the subtleties of ethnic and religious diversity in the
    region. How many outsiders, on this evidence, can? Anyway, the point
    is that such diversity, once released from the grip of an overarching
    police state, inevitably causes friction and fragmentation. It would
    happen without the evil allure of oil, but oil makes everything
    vastly worse, because into the local quarrels come dollar-laden
    foreigners, buying and bribing in their desperation for the Earth's
    black blood. Control of the pipelines, accordingly, becomes a reason
    for mass murder. If oil did not matter, some other prompt for fighting
    would be needed; but -just perhaps -none might be found.

    All this partly explains the background to the Beslan tragedy. It
    does not, for absolutely nothing can, excuse it.
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