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The Globe and Mail (Canada)
December 29, 2001
World's rebels chilled by bin Laden effect
By GEOFFREY YORK
MOSCOW -- Within the space of a few months, Chechnya's separatist rebels have
suffered a dramatic reversal of their image on the global stage -- and they can
blame Osama bin Laden for their plight.
For years, they were seen as freedom fighters whose human rights needed to be
protected from Russian military abuses.
But since Sept. 11, the Chechens have increasingly been seen as terrorists
and bombmakers who represent the sinister spread of Islamic extremism.
The same reversal of fortune is evident around the world today.
In one of the lesser-noticed outcomes of the Osama bin Laden saga -- and yet
probably one of his most important legacies -- a host of Muslim rebel armies
have unexpectedly found themselves on the wrong side of the global propaganda
battlefield.
The result is more power for national regimes to attack their domestic
enemies, especially Muslim rebels.
These regimes have shrewdly exploited the global mood to justify their
crackdowns on domestic insurgencies. The consequence, paradoxically, could be a
rise in domestic wars and political violence.
Mr. bin Laden's terrorist tactics have provided a pretext for military-style
campaigns against Islamic separatists in Russia, China, Central Asia, South Asia
and other regions.
The rise of the "antiterrorist campaign," as an all-purpose
rationale for war, is strengthening military commanders and damaging the fragile
peace processes and political dialogues that were under way in these regions.
Political leaders in most of these regions were already using their wars
against Islamic rebels to help crush dissent and prop up their regimes. Now it
is easier for them to pursue these tactics. They can gain foreign sympathy by
portraying their wars as campaigns against terrorists. And there is much less
international pressure to negotiate a peace agreement with rebel forces.
Chechnya is an example. The Kremlin has relentlessly exploited its clients in
the Northern Alliance, the most significant anti-Taliban force in Afghanistan,
to spread the propaganda message that the Chechens are terrorists and extremists
with close links to the Afghan training camps of Mr. bin Laden.
This message has been constantly spouted by the Northern Alliance, even
though there is little hard evidence of Chechens in the bin Laden network.
Alliance commanders repeatedly proclaimed that large numbers of Chechens are
rank-and-file fighters for the Taliban and Mr. bin Laden, equating them with the
hundreds of Pakistani and Arab radicals who helped the Taliban.
The message was echoed in the world's news media, without verification. Yet
few Chechens have been discovered among the thousands of Taliban prisoners
captured in the fighting so far.
Most analysts now believe that only a handful of Chechens have ever had links
to Afghanistan. But since the Northern Alliance was heavily dependent on Russian
weapon supplies, it was probably not coincidental that the alliance was doing
Russia a favour by trying to discredit the Chechens.
Since Sept. 11, the United States has muted its previous criticism of
human-rights violations by Russian troops in Chechnya, including alleged mass
murders, torture and other atrocities. Instead, it has allowed Moscow to portray
the Chechen war as just another front in the international battle against
terrorism.
U.S. President George W. Bush declared that some of Mr. bin Laden's
terrorists are based in Chechnya, although he did not provide any evidence. And
Russian President Vladimir Putin seized the chance to link Chechen rebels to Mr.
bin Laden's terrorists, saying: "These people are virtually from one and
the same organization. They were jointly trained in the same terrorist centres.
They regard bin Laden as their teacher."
Mr. Putin's spokesman on the Chechnya issue, Sergei Yastrzhembsky, boasted
that the U.S. campaign against terrorism has been "a good service" to
Russia.
Islamic radical groups have gained support in autocratic countries in Central
Asia and South Asia when other dissident groups have been largely crushed,
leaving the Islamists as the only form of organized opposition. By portraying
their opponents as terrorists, the regimes in these countries can seek a
military solution to their domestic problems, rather than having to make
compromises to deal with the underlying political issues.
In Central Asia, the global antiterrorism campaign has strengthened the
authoritarian regimes of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, where the U.S. military has
set up bases or used local airspace for its warplanes.
Uzbek President Islam Karimov used the Sept. 11 attacks to justify his
imprisonment of more than 7,000 Muslims over the past two years. Many were
arrested for nothing more than praying or attending mosque.
After Sept. 11, the United States publicly condemned the largest Islamic
rebel movement in Uzbekistan as a terrorist organization, boosting Mr. Karimov's
power to crack down on Islamic activists in the country, whether they are
terrorists or not. Washington has abruptly reduced its criticism of his
human-rights violations, and Uzbek dissidents are afraid that Washington will
stop pressuring Mr. Karimov to release activists from jail.
A similar trend is spreading across Asia. In China, for example, Beijing has
cited the Sept. 11 attacks to justify its campaign against Islamic rebels in the
restive Xinjiang region.
"China is also threatened by terrorism," Foreign Minister Tang
Jiaxuan told the United Nations last month. He said the Xinjiang rebels are
"trained, equipped and financed by international terrorist
organizations." His government also declared that about 1,000 separatists
from Xinjiang were trained in Afghan terrorist camps.
In Indonesia, the government began a lobbying campaign to persuade the United
States that Mr. bin Laden's people were supporting Islamic militants on the
island of Sulawesi, where hundreds of people have been killed in clashes between
Muslims and Christians. "We will wage war on terrorism," Defence
Minister Matori Abdul Djalil said.
There has been no evidence, however, of any al-Qaeda bases in Indonesia.
Western analysts believe the Indonesian government is exaggerating the threat in
an effort to persuade Washington to reverse its two-year-old ban on military
sales to Indonesia.
In the Philippines, the government has switched tactics to portray a leading
rebel group as a terrorist organization with links to Mr. bin Laden. Before
Sept. 11, it called the group a bunch of bandits. Now, by linking the group to
the Afghan-based terrorists, it has secured U.S. military help for its crackdown
on the rebels.
And in the disputed Kashmir region on the border between Pakistan and India,
the Indian government alleges that Islamic rebel forces are terrorists with
links to Mr. bin Laden and the Taliban.
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