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#7
Kennan Institute
event summary
The Chechen War: Anti-Terrorist Operation or Human Rights Disaster?
In a recent lecture at the Kennan Institute, Matthew Evangelista discussed
the recent changes in Western opinion regarding the Chechen conflict.
Evangelista began by explaining that the Russian military campaigns in the
Chechen conflict have entailed "massive indiscriminate bombings of cities
and villages with high civilian casualties, sweep operations, and herding of
people into so-called filtration camps, with evidence of extra-judicial
killings, torture, and disappearances." Evangelista noted that throughout
the 1990s, many European organizations and governments called attention to the
human rights violations by the Russian army. However, following the terrorist
attacks of September 11th, the Chechen conflict is now seen in a different
light. According to Evangelista, Russian officials have attempted to portray the
Chechen conflict as part of the international war against terrorism, rather than
as a civil conflict.
Evangelista contended that the international reaction to the Chechen
situation has been a series of ups and downs with little apparent effect on
Russia's behavior. He cited examples of how Europe has reinforced its demands on
Moscow to pursue negotiations to end the war with stronger, albeit largely
symbolic, measures. Evangelista noted that the European Union delayed
implementation of the 1994 Partnership and Cooperation Agreement until 1997,
after the first Chechen war had ended. In April 2000, the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe suspended the Russian delegation's voting rights for a
time and threatened to expel Russia from the body if it did not pursue
negotiations with "a cross section of the Chechen people." He
explained that Russia failed to comply with these demands, yet its voting rights
were restored anyhow.
Evangelista stated that while the events of September 11th changed a great
deal in international politics, the links between Chechnya and terrorism long
predate the attacks on the World Trade Center. He explained that many of the
actions of both the Russian armed forces and the Chechen rebels could qualify as
terrorist acts. According to Evangelista, Chechen terrorist acts during the
first conflict, "led to a deeper demoralization of the Russian population
over the war." However, he explained, recent terrorist plots such as the
theater hostage crisis and the recent bombing of the headquarters of the
pro-Moscow government in Grozny have resulted in "a bolstering of support
for the Russian government and a very hostile attitude towards Chechens in
general."
In Evangelista's opinion, Russia's handling of the U.S.-led war in
Afghanistan has been puzzling. He explained that following President Vladimir
Putin's call to President Bush, Moscow did not seem interested in exerting the
leverage it held regarding the U.S.-led war against the Taliban in Afghanistan.
According to Evangelista, the prospect of a U.S.-led war against international
terrorism "led to a serious rethinking of Russia's understanding of its own
security to include an acceptance of U.S. military involvement along Russia's
periphery as a valuable contribution to the war against terrorism."
Evangelista noted that Putin has recently attempted to use the hostage crisis
as part of a larger policy of shifting the focus of the Chechen conflict, what
was initially viewed as a move for greater autonomy, to part of the
international war against terrorism. He warned that Western leaders must
remember that militants inspired by Islam make up only a small portion of the
Chechen resistance, and Chechnya has no tradition of suicide bombers or
martyrdom. Evangelista concluded by stating that while he does not have a
solution to the conflict in Chechnya, he believes that the Russian government's
solution of classifying the war against Chechens as an anti-terrorist operation
is very unlikely to succeed.
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