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#8
CENTRAL ASIA - CAUCASUS ANALYST
http://www.cacianalyst.org/
November 6, 2002
THE CHECHEN THEATER OF WAR
Stephen Blank
AUTHOR BIO: Professor Stephen Blank, Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War
College, Carlisle Barracks, PA 17013.
The lurid and tragic terrorist operation in Moscow and Russia's military
action to rescue the captives inside a theater sheds a disturbing light upon the
course of Russia's Chechen war. This light shines equally upon the Chechens and
the Russian government and military, and it shows that the implications of the
Chechen operation and the Russian counter-terrorist action must be viewed with
concern.
BACKGROUND: The Chechen terrorist seizure
of a Moscow theater on October 23-24 clearly represented their despair over the
course of the war. But more importantly, it was strategically misconceived for
many reasons. First, it seemingly confirmed the constant Russian charges that
the war is just another operation in the global campaign against international
terrorism. Second, although the terrorists sought to carry out a spectacular
operation, they also gave Moscow no choice but to respond forcefully. Third,
this operation once again suggested that "Islamic terrorism" had
indeed hijacked the Chechens' long-standing campaign for independence and
self-rule. Thus it diverted attention away from the Russian misrule that lies at
the root of the two Chechen wars since 1994. In that respect it played into
Russian hands, at least in the short term. Finally, this operation also raises
the question of whether or not there is someone with whom Moscow could negotiate
authoritatively even if it wanted to do so. President Aslan Maskhadov's
authority over various Chechen guerrillas, though often claimed, could not have
benefited even from a successful Chechen operation let alone a failure.
Maskhadov is either a rather weak figure who cannot deliver a solution or
exercise genuine command; or, if he truly supported this operation, then he
validated Moscow's refusal to negotiate with him because he too supports
terrorism. Thus the authors of this operation have much to answer for because
they have decisively set back the cause of Chechen independence while seemingly
making Moscow's case for the war.
None of these considerations, however, exonerates Moscow. As this author and
many others have long asserted, this war's roots lie in Russian misrule and
readiness to countenance a war against Chechnya for domestic political reasons.
Moreover, Russian conduct in this war has reached a level of unparalleled
brutality in contemporary warfare of our time, outpacing by far Serb atrocities
in Kosovo. Despite the liberation of this theater and the substantial political
or propaganda victory that Russia will now harvest, the fact remains that the
Russian army cannot and will not bring this war to any sort of victorious
conclusion. There is no concept of victory other than the elimination of
Chechnya as a socio-political entity, and the Russian army is almost as much a
mob as it is a professional armed force. This war and the Russian Army have
become a byword for brutality, corruption together with selected Chechen
warlords who collaborate in those activities, and a level of mistreatment of the
population and soldiery that no professional Army would long tolerate. Thus this
army cannot achieve a victory and the area, as well as Russia, are obliged to
live with continuing war and its likely spread through further terrorist
operations into Russia proper. Putin's threats to use even weapons of mass
destruction anywhere on the globe against further terrorist threats using such
weapons can only alarm, not impress observers.
IMPLICATIONS: These threats oblige us to
ponder several disturbing strategic consequences of this operation for the
future. First, all of Russia and especially Moscow can now be targeted by these
or other terrorist groups. Second, the malfeasance of the Russian intelligence
forces, who allowed these people to get into Moscow, obtain weapons and
explosives, and rehearse their operation must become the subject of a
tough-minded after-action report lest there be a repeat of this crisis. Given
the FSB's well-known corruption and incompetence, it is of utmost importance to
see how the aftermath of this operation affects it. Second, a review of the
options available to Russia's special forces must be undertaken since evidently
the usual rule of saving lives as the first priority is not high upon their or
the governments priorities. Third, and perhaps most consequential is the fact
that chemical weapons or something resembling them were used here. Reports
suggest the gas used was a derivative of opium known as Fentanyl, likely
compounded with other, unknown substances. Whatever it is, used in those doses
(reportedly five times as much as was necessary) it clearly is lethal to large
numbers of people and not just an incapacitating drug. Second, by using this
weapon, Russia showed that it retains large stocks of usable chemical weapons
despite repeated pledges to clean them up. Moscow alternates between promises to
do so and appeals for more Western subsidies to do so. This operation suggests
that chemical weapons research continues and that their use is contemplated in
military operations. Therefore a dangerous threshold has been crossed. Future
terrorists who have already sought to use chemical, biological, and nuclear
weapons will consider themselves justified by Russia's action in using them.
This consideration heightens the risk we face in future terrorist operations
anywhere in the world.
CONCLUSIONS: Russia has unwittingly
opened the door to threat scenarios of higher and greater risk. By crossing the
threshold of non-use of chemical weapons or other weapons of mass destruction
and showing that it still regards their use as a justified part of projected
military operations, it could lead others to emulate it. As long as a
justification for their use is plausible, this operation also suggests that they
can be used with impunity. Moscow has also inadvertently raised questions about
its reliability with regard to conventions banning the use and development of
chemical weapons and other arms control and proliferation accords. Its actions
eliminated the urgent threat of mass casualties but will probably harden its
determination and the Chechens' equivalent but opposing will to continue
fighting. Thus no end is in sight to the Chechen war. The counter-terrorist
operation was necessary as no government would have tolerated or accepted it,
but the manner of its execution can only raise disturbing questions and trigger
no little anxiety for the future.
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