
#7
In the National Interest
http://www.inthenationalinterest.com/Articles/Vol1Issue9/Vol1Issue9SimesSaun
ders1.html
Russia in Chechnya: Their Predicament, Our Dilemma
By Dimitri K. Simes and Paul J. Saunders
Dimitri K. Simes is the President of The Nixon Center and the Publisher of In
the National Interest. Paul J. Saunders is the Director of The Nixon Center and
a senior editor at In the National Interest.
In the aftermath of the Moscow hostage crisis, Russia¹s predicament in
Chechnya remains unenviable. While it is easy for outsiders to criticize Russian
conduct there, few have been able to offer realistic solutions. Still, with
creativity and modest expectations, the United States can make a difference.
After a successful beginning to its second intervention in Chechnya, the
Russian military is again bogged down in a protracted and ugly conflict. The
rebels control little territory‹at least by day‹but retain strongholds in
the mountains and remain well motivated. They also have impressive access to
modern weapons like surface-to-air missiles, with which they have shot down six
Russian helicopters in less than four months, including one incident in which
over a hundred soldiers were killed.
Russia¹s own forces are demoralized, ill equipped and so corrupt that
illegal deals with Russian military personnel are the source of many weapons in
Chechen hands. Though some commanders are impressive, and some soldiers display
great bravery, the Russian effort suffers considerably from poor coordination
among regular military detachments, special forces and police units, who often
work at cross-purposes. Thus even if the Chechen rebels cannot hope to defeat a
vastly superior Russian force, Russian control of their territory is, if
anything, deteriorating.
To some, these realities may appear to be powerful arguments for a political
settlement to the conflict. Unfortunately, the situation is not so simple.
First, the Kremlin has a point in saying that it has no good negotiating
partner in the Chechen leadership. Chechen president Aslan Maskhadov may not be
a terrorist mastermind, but he was the region¹s leader at the time of its worst
excesses, when kidnapping and murder were rampant (affecting not only locals but
also Western aid workers), and when sharia courts were forcibly introduced.
Moreover, although it has not been demonstrated conclusively that Chechens were
responsible for hundreds of civilian deaths in apartment bombings in Moscow and
other Russian cities in 1999, it is clear beyond any reasonable doubt that
Chechen forces invaded the neighboring Russian region of Dagestan that same year
with a view to inciting its otherwise moderate Muslim population to rebellion.
Shamil Basayev, who led the incursion and has recently accepted responsibility
for the hostage incident, is no stranger to Maskhadov¹s government: he has held
top positions including acting prime minister and first deputy
commander-in-chief of Chechen military forces. Basayev¹s personal relationship
with Maskhadov is tenuous at best, but at a minimum Maskhadov has been unable to
control him. The consensus in Moscow is that the two have adopted a convenient
"good cop, bad cop" division of labor. Still, regardless of
Maskhadov¹s possible connection to the hostage-taking, it is politically
unthinkable for Vladimir Putin to allow the Chechen president, much less Shamil
Basayev, any role in governing Chechnya. And while the Russian government enjoys
weak support in occupied areas, the rebels have also lost substantial popularity
among ordinary people, most of whom want peace with dignity rather than a return
to the chaos, violence and Islamic extremism of the 1996-99 period.
At the same time, the conduct of Russian military forces in Chechnya has been
deplorable. Put simply, the unreformed and outmoded Russian army is incapable of
fighting an 21st century American-style war with limited civilian casualties‹it
is an axe rather than a scalpel. And notwithstanding its expensive technology
and training, the U.S. military itself was unable to avoid errors leading to
civilian deaths in Afghanistan. Vladimir Putin would likely welcome having a
different kind of army, but he has what he has. Under the circumstances,
demanding the impossible of Putin and his generals sounds to Russian ears like a
hypocritical suggestion to surrender to the Chechens. Perversely, however, some
in the military and security services are not afraid to exploit Western
pressure, which then becomes an alibi of sorts. They are eager to blame their
failure to achieve victory on compliance with non-existent constraints imposed
from the outside rather than their own incompetence.
One of us directly experienced Russian frustration with U.S. criticism of the
Kremlin¹s Chechnya policy in Moscow last week. Russian leaders across the
political spectrum believed that America is willing to define as
"terrorists" only those who directly attack the United States‹and
that as a result, Washington sees itself as the only government entitled to do
whatever it takes to fight terrorism. This perception not only contributes to
anti-Americanism in Russia, but also becomes a real obstacle to working with
Moscow to advance important U.S. interests and, most essential, to winning
genuine Russian cooperation on non-proliferation and in the war on terrorism.
Taking into account these broader interests, the Bush Administration is right
to approach the Kremlin carefully and to resist pressures for moralistic
posturing over Chechnya. The war is a Russian dilemma and responsibility for
resolving it is best left in Moscow rather than Washington. Still, there are a
few useful things that the administration could do localize and gradually calm
the conflict:
First, as a component of its declaratory policy recognizing Chechnya as a
part of the Russian Federation, the Bush Administration should strongly
encourage Tblisi to take all possible steps to drive Chechen rebel groups from
Georgia. In parallel, the administration should discourage Moscow from
unilateral military action across the Georgian border. This two-track approach
would help to prevent the conflict from spreading to Georgia, which is the key
transit route for the important new Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline.
Second, the administration should build on its willingness to share
information regarding the international terrorist connections of Chechnya¹s
rebels‹for which it deserves credit‹by giving serious and thorough
consideration to Russian requests to identify some of the most radical
pro-Chechen groups formally as terrorist organizations, freeze their assets, and
take other appropriate steps under existing American anti-terrorist legislation.
Third, the administration should use American influence with Saudi Arabia and
other Persian Gulf states, which Moscow views as a major source of funds for the
Chechen rebels, to begin to shut down the flow of outside money and materiel
into Chechnya.
Finally, the administration might consider using the forthcoming November 22
summit near St. Petersburg as an opportunity for President Bush to tell
President Putin that while the United States respects Russia¹s right to make
its own decisions in Chechnya within civilized norms, Washington is prepared to
attempt to facilitate dialogue between Moscow and its Chechen opponents. For
example, the Russian government is already considering a holding a referendum on
a new constitution for Chechnya and would like to bring moderate Chechen leaders
into that process. The United States could be of some help in facilitating this.
These offers should be coupled with a tactful but clear explanation that the
war in Chechnya and Russian brutalities there do have an impact on the United
States. President Putin must understand the simple fact that no American
administration can possibly go as far as he and President Bush may like in
developing the U.S.-Russian relationship if the list of abuses in Chechnya
continues to grow.
This may not sound like an ambitious plan to some, but it may be America¹s
best realistic option‹especially if one¹s objective is to limit human
suffering and to advance the U.S. agenda with Mr. Putin rather than to score
political points against Russia, which some seem to forget is no longer our
enemy.
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