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  • How West Misreports Conflictin Caucasus

    HOW WEST MISREPORTS CONFLICTIN CAUCASUS

    (c) Sputnik/ Igor Mikhalev
    COLUMNISTS
    16:37 13.12.2014(updated 18:09 13.12.2014)
    Alexander Mercouris
    1709202
    In the midst of the United States' seemingly endless "War on Terror",
    the jihadi terrorist movement that for more than a decade has been
    waging war on Russia in the Caucasus, is spared all criticism.

    (c) SPUTNIK/ IGOR MIKHALEV Commemorating the First Chechen War
    in Pictures 17 LONDON, December 13 (Sputnik) -- The latest jihadi
    attack on the Chechen capital Grozny once again illustrates a dark
    truth. Namely that in the midst of the United States' seemingly
    endless "War on Terror" one jihadi terrorist movement is spared all
    criticism. This is the one which for more than a decade has been
    waging war on Russia in the Caucasus.

    This is clearly shown by the way the Western media reported the
    attack. Though it received scant attention, the reports of the incident
    that were provided studiously avoided referring to the perpetrators as
    either "jihadis" or "terrorists". Instead they were called such things
    as "militants", "separatists" or even just "Chechens" -- the last
    especially outrageous given that their intended targets were Chechens.

    It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that it is because this
    particular jihadi movement, unlike all the rest, targets Russia. That
    this is the only thing that differentiates this jihadi movement
    from the others is unimportant. The mere fact it opposes Russia is
    apparently enough.

    That this is indeed a terrorist jihadi movement no different from
    the others requires some explanation and a brief discussion of the
    recent history of the Caucasus.

    Firstly, it should be said clearly that the jihadi movement in the
    Caucasus is a product of the political crisis that arose in Russia at
    the fall of the USSR in 1991. It is fashionable in the west to claim
    that it is something else and dates back to earlier times. Recently
    a number of books and articles have appeared that purport to trace
    its origins all the way back to the wars the Russian Empire fought in
    the 19th century in the Caucasus. According to this view, the jihadi
    movement is merely the latest manifestation of the struggle of the
    Muslim people of the Caucasus against Russia that began in the early
    19th century. The Chechens in particular are supposed to be engaged
    in a centuries old struggle for liberation against Russia and their
    recent history is in inevitably described in these terms.

    (c) SPUTNIK/ SAID TCARNAEV Putin: Chechnya Will Successfully Cope
    With Recent Surge in Terror Activity A brief survey of the actual
    history of the Caucasus, and of Chechnya in particular, shows that
    this view of Caucasian history is quite simply wrong.

    In the 19th century the Russian Empire did fight a long war in the
    Caucasus against some, though not all, the Muslim people there. This
    war is the subject of Russian literary works by Tolstoy and Lermontov
    amongst others. Russia was eventually victorious in this war, fully
    pacifying the Caucasus by the 1860s. In the process the Russians
    and the Caucasians who fought each other acquired considerable
    knowledge and respect for each other. The Caucasian leader Shamil was,
    for example, treated with great respect by the Russians following
    his capture and was even allowed by them to go on a pilgrimage to
    Mecca -- honorable treatment of a brave enemy unknown and probably
    incomprehensible to the West today.

    Following the 1860s, the Caucasus basically became a peaceful
    and stable region of the Russian Empire. During the period of the
    Revolution, the region witnessed considerable instability, but then
    this was true of the Russian Empire as a whole. Once the USSR became
    consolidated the history of the peoples of the Caucasus became part of
    the general history of the USSR. Thus whilst there was considerable
    opposition in the Caucasus to collectivization this was true of the
    USSR as a whole.

    Claims made of a continuous history of Chechen hostility to Russia
    and Russians tend to center on events during the Second World War.

    Stalin's government accused the Chechens of collaborating with the
    Germans and as a form of collective punishment deported the entire
    Chechen nation from their homes.

    This episode has been seized on by certain Western scholars and
    journalists looking for proof of the supposed age-old enmity that
    supposedly exists between the Chechen people and Russia. Recently a
    number of books have appeared in the west which purport to describe
    the conflict between the Chechens and the Russians during the Second
    World War and the rebellion the Soviet authorities are supposed to
    have faced in the Caucasus.

    (c) SPUTNIK/ SAID TSARNAEV New Airport to Be Built in Chechen Capital:
    Leader There is no doubt that some people in the Caucasus did try
    to take advantage of the exceptionally difficult situation in which
    the USSR found itself to try to achieve their own goals though what
    these were precisely it is not always easy to say. The same however
    was true in other parts of the USSR as well. The Caucasus was not the
    only region of the USSR were the Germans found collaborators. As the
    story of the Vlasov army shows, there were collaborators even among
    Russians. That some people tried to take advantage of a difficult
    situation does not mean that the majority did or even wanted to.

    Those best qualified to know the true situation, the Soviet government,
    exonerated the Chechens in the 1950s and allowed them to return to
    their homes. In view of this it seems perverse for Western writers
    to say today that Stalin's allegations against the Chechens were
    true after all. It is a bizarre, and to my knowledge unique, case of
    westerners endorsing allegations Stalin made which subsequent Soviet
    and Russian governments have rejected.

    The deportation for the Chechen people was for them a traumatic
    experience. This should not obscure the fact that the subsequent
    period following their return from the 1950s to the final end of
    the USSR was in Chechnya and elsewhere in the Caucasus a period of
    peace and prosperity. In view of this, it is unsurprising that in
    the referendum held in March 1991 the Muslim people of the northern
    Caucasus voted overwhelmingly to support the continuation of the USSR.

    Chechens throughout this period were full Soviet citizens and many
    made the most of the opportunities this offered them. Two well-known
    examples are Dzhokar Dudayev, who became a Major General in the
    Soviet Air Force, and Ruslan Khasbulatov, who eventually rose to
    become chairman of the Congress of People's Deputies of the Russian
    Federation in the early Yeltsin era.

    (c) RIA NOVOSTI. SAID TSARNAEV Gems of Chechnya: Brick by Brick,
    Mountainous Republic Rebuilds and Hopes Return 10 The crisis that
    convulsed the Caucasus and Chechnya in particular in 1991 cannot
    therefore be explained as part of some great historic conflict between
    Chechens and Russians. Rather it is better understood as part of the
    general crisis that affected the whole of the USSR at that time.

    In Chechnya, the weakening of state authority opened the way for a
    violent armed coup by the followers of Dzokhar Dudayev. Significantly
    Dudayev's movement had not previously sought secession from the USSR.

    Rather its demands were for Chechnya to be accepted as a sovereign
    Republic of the USSR alongside the three other Caucasian republics,
    Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan.

    In the aftermath of the failed August coup attempt in Moscow in 1991,
    Dudayev and his followers seized the opportunity to launch a coup
    of their own in Grozny. The coup was carried out with considerable
    violence and resulted in the murder of several of Dudayev's opponents.

    Whilst it is clear that Dudayev enjoyed some support in Chechnya,
    its extent is difficult to judge since he never submitted himself
    to any form of election process whilst he was in power. That most
    people in Chechnya did not support him appears to be confirmed by a
    referendum which he did hold shortly after he seized power. Turnout
    in that referendum was very low, perhaps as low as 20%. The region of
    Ingushetia, which had been united with Chechnya, refused to accept
    Dudayev's authority and seceded, accepting the authority of the
    central government in Moscow. Today it is a separate republic within
    the Russian Federation.

    As time passed, Dudayev ran into increasing opposition in Chechnya
    itself and by 1994 he faced rebellion. The conflict became violent
    and the central government in Moscow became involved, leading to the
    First Chechen War over the course of which Dudayev himself was killed.

    Federal troops were withdrawn following a peace agreement in 1996 which
    however enabled some of Dudayev's former associates to seize power.

    Thereafter, between 1996 and 1999 Chechnya was basically left to
    itself. A presidential election took place during this period,
    whose fairness and legitimacy, predictably enough, was recognized
    by western governments and NGOs. However, in the conditions that
    existed in Chechnya at this time, it would have been impossible for
    a pro-Russian candidate to stand in such an election so it is wrong
    to accept it as offering a true picture of opinion there. All one
    can say about this election is that it was conducted in conditions of
    great instability and that it resulted in the election of Mashkhadov,
    the more moderate figure of the two put forward, the other being the
    violent jihadi extremist, Shamil Basayev.

    (c) SPUTNIK/ SAID TCARNAEV Islamic State Commander Threatening to
    Invade Russia Dead: Chechen Leader What is indisputable is that over
    the period of its self-declared independence, first under Dudayev
    from 1992 to 1994, and then from 1996 to 1999, Chechnya became heavily
    infiltrated by Islamic militants some of them with links to what became
    Al Qaeda. As time passed these groups became increasingly dominant
    and by 1999 were effectively in control. Following several years of
    growing gangsterism, frequently punctuated with mass kidnappings and
    ransom demands of people from southern Russia, in 1999 these militant
    jihadis launched an invasion of the neighboring republic of Dagestan
    and a series of bomb attacks on apartment buildings in Moscow. By
    this point their agenda was no longer independence for Chechnya but
    an Islamist war against Russia.

    This war has been fought with relentless ferocity ever since. Using the
    same methods as other Al Qaeda affiliated jihadi groups, indiscriminate
    attacks have been launched against the Russian civilian population,
    including horrifying terrorist outrages such as the Nord-Ost Theatre
    siege and the massacre of schoolchildren at Beslan.

    These actions have in turn provoked the central government in Moscow
    to reassert control, which by and large it has successfully done. In
    doing so there is little doubt that the central government has had
    the support of the great majority of the local people. The fact that
    the jihadi movement in the Caucasus has been first contained and then
    largely defeated is proof of this. Without such support this would
    not have been possible.

    As of today, the jihadi insurgency in the Caucasus is the only jihadi
    insurgency that has been successfully contained and largely defeated.

    This is an important fact about it that neither the western media
    nor western governments have ever acknowledged.

    Indeed the account of the conflict given here, though it is the
    correct one, is not the one the western media and western governments
    have given. In particular the insurgency Russia has been fighting
    in the Caucasus since the 1990s, and in particular since 1999, is
    an Islamic jihadi insurgency is a fact which in the West has never
    acknowledged. The independent US scholar Gordon Hahn (whose views
    about the conflict are by no means identical to the ones given here)
    has complained prolifically about this. His complaints on this point
    have however gone largely unnoticed.

    This in itself is bad enough. However what is much worse is the
    way the western media and to some extent western governments have
    sought to turn the facts of the conflict on their head by blaming
    the worst atrocities of the conflict not on the perpetrators but on
    their victims.

    This has been true throughout the conflict. It was already true for
    example during the period of Chechnya's self-declared independence
    from 1996 to 1999. The terrorist outrages involving kidnappings and
    ransom demands that took place during this period were reported
    with indifference in the west provided they were directed at the
    Russian civilian population. Only when westerners were kidnapped
    did interest briefly flicker. The Russian film 'Voyna' (2002) --
    a film in part about the kidnapping by Chechens of two Britons --
    captures this attitude perfectly.

    The situation however becomes even more grotesque when jihadi terrorism
    against Russians becomes so extreme that they simply cannot be ignored.

    (c) AP PHOTO/ FILE Over 5,000 Killed in Jihadist Attacks Worldwide
    in November: Study If one takes what were possibly the four most
    egregious acts of terrorism committed against Russian targets by
    Caucasian jihadi terrorists -- the mass kidnapping at Budennyovsk, the
    Moscow apartment bombings, the Nord-Ost Theatre siege and the Beslan
    massacre -- what one notices from western media coverage in each case
    is (1) a reluctance to condemn the action and to call it by the simple
    and accurate word "terrorism" (2) reporting that always seeks to
    "explain" the action in terms of the demonstrably false historical
    narrative of Russian-Caucasian interaction discussed here and (3)
    an attempt to blame the Russian authorities for what happened.

    The most extreme example of (3) is the 1999 Moscow apartment bombings.

    Though jihadi leaders admitted their responsibility for the bombings at
    the time when they happened, and though every one of those responsible
    for the bombings has been identified, with several captured, put
    on trial and convicted of the crime, the western media and even
    some western governments continue to indulge in the theory that the
    Russian authorities were in some way responsible. Though nothing that
    could remotely be called evidence has ever been produced to support
    this fantastic -- indeed outrageous -- theory, it continues to be
    endlessly repeated, with a seemingly unending series of books and
    articles published that purport to "prove" it true. This at the same
    time as western authorities and media show no such tolerance for the
    claims of the US's government's involvement in the terrorist attacks
    on the United States that took place on September 9th 2001.

    However, if claims of Russian involvement in the 1999 Moscow apartment
    bombings are the most extreme example of this practice, it is also
    present in all the other cases cited. Thus the anti-terrorist
    action that saved most of the hostages in the Nord-Ost theatre
    siege (and which would certainly have been praised if it had taken
    place in similar circumstances in the West) is routinely condemned
    for its alleged "ruthlessness", whilst the Russian authorities were
    alternatively criticized for failing to prevent the mass kidnapping at
    Budennyovsk and for failing to surrender to the terrorists' demands
    at Beslan. In all cases the conduct of the Russian security forces
    comes in for particular criticism and even mockery, with no attempt
    ever made to relate their actual conduct to the extremely difficult
    conditions they have had to face on each occasion.

    If the activities of the jihadis in the Caucasus have stirred little
    outrage in the West, the same emphatically has not been true of the
    steps taken by the Russian authorities to combat them. Always and
    invariably, these have been the subject of ferocious condemnation.

    This tends to reach fever pitch whenever it appears that the Russian
    security forces look like they might win. This was particularly so over
    the course of 1999. Western media coverage of the conflict that year
    went from confident though as it turned out groundless predictions
    that the Russian security forces would lose to a furious campaign
    of denunciation of the Russian security forces and of the Russian
    political leadership when it became increasingly obvious that on
    the contrary they were going to win. I can still remember watching a
    Channel 4 'Despatches' program on British television in the winter of
    that year in which the reporter seemed unable to control his anger as
    he reeled off a seemingly unending list of war crimes he alleged with
    no evidence the Russian military had committed. The actual context
    of the conflict that year, the bombings in the Moscow apartments and
    the jihadi attack on Dagestan, were not mentioned.

    The same biased reporting has continued ever since. The western media
    still refuses to call the Caucasian jihadis terrorists -- something it
    unhesitatingly calls all Muslim jihadi movements everywhere else. Even
    more absurdly, it still refuses even to admit that they are jihadis
    even though they themselves make no secret of the fact. Whilst
    Western governments act purposefully to close down all other jihadi
    terrorist websites operating from their territories, the Caucasian
    jihadi website the Kavkaz Centre continues in Finland unimpeded.

    Such as is the tolerance extended to Caucasian terrorists in the West
    that when the Russian authorities attempted to alert the US authorities
    to the dangers posed by the Tsarnaev brothers their warnings were
    ignored. Subsequently, their attacks in the US were rightly condemned
    as terrorism. By contrast the latest jihadi attack on Grozny is not.

    Meanwhile, whilst the West continues to indulge the Caucasian jihadi
    movement so long as it confines its attacks on Russia, Ramzan Kadyrov,
    the leader of the present government of Chechnya, who has sided with
    Russia, comes in for relentless criticism for opposing them.

    (c) SPUTNIK/ SAID TSARNAEV Five Police Officers Die Conducting Special
    Operation in Chechnya Wild allegations of Kadyrov's involvement in
    various murders and human rights abuses are thrown around with abandon
    without so much as a scintilla of proof. He continues to be routinely
    accused in the West of responsibility for the murders of the two
    journalists Politkovskaya and Estemirova though the investigations into
    both murders have for any reasonable person conclusively established
    his complete innocence in both cases. The fact that his father was the
    victim of jihadi violence and that Chechnya's economic and security
    situation has been transformed during the period when he has headed
    its government is hardly ever mentioned.

    The size of the gap between western stories about Kadyrov and the
    actual reality was for me exposed perfectly by a US embassy cable
    leaked by the alternative media organisation Wikileaks. It contained
    a report of a party that Kadyrov and a US diplomat both attended. The
    diplomat's report dripped with contempt for Kadyrov and was filled
    with innuendo both about the nature of the party and about Kadyrov's
    behaviour during it. One had to read the report carefully to realize
    that in fact nothing that could be remotely called unseemly had
    actually happened or been done by anyone at the party, which seems
    in fact to have been a rather staid affair.

    The last few years have shown a steady, though gradual, stabilisation
    of the security situation in the Caucasus. This last year was the
    most peaceful the region has known since the crisis year of 1991. As
    discussed, given the region's complex history and geography, this
    would not have been possible without the support of its people.

    The situation in the region however remains complex. Economic
    conditions are still difficult and unemployment is high. Though their
    activities are much diminished and most of their leaders have been
    killed, violent jihadis are still active there. The region needs
    a long period of peace and of sustained investment to overcome its
    problems. After all they have suffered its people deserve no less.

    Playing political games with their history and supporting, however
    indirectly, the terrorists who remain amongst them is not the way to
    help them achieve it.

    http://sputniknews.com/columnists/20141213/1015810331.html




    From: A. Papazian
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