http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/04/AR2010040402723.html?wpisrc=nl_opinions

How Russia nourishes radical Islam
      
By Masha Lipman
Monday, April 5, 2010 

MOSCOW 

After the bombings in this city's subway system last week, U.S. Secretary of 
State Hillary Clinton noted that we all "face the same enemy." No one -- 
whether in Moscow, London, Madrid or New York -- can be fully secure against 
acts of terrorism. In Russia, however, the problem of terrorism is arguably 
more difficult than in Europe or the United States. We have radical Islam right 
inside our borders, in the North Caucasus. There is no getting away from it: 
People who live in this territory are Russian citizens; its provinces are 
financed by the Russian federal budget. It is as though Afghanistan, with its 
insurgent activity, were a U.S. state within the borders of the Lower 48. 

But while the challenge of terrorism cries for long-term, consistent strategy, 
Russia's system of heavy-handed and unaccountable governance precludes 
strategic thinking. 

In the early 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Boris Yeltsin's 
government responded to armed secessionists in Chechnya by waging a full-scale 
war. Russia's armed forces were undertrained and undersupplied; horrific 
atrocities ensued on both sides. The 1996 peace agreement was evidence of 
Russia's humiliating weakness: A former superpower failed to subdue its own 
tiny region. 

"Peace" in Chechnya entailed frequent kidnappings for ransom, hostage-taking 
and terrorist attacks. In 1999, a Chechen force invaded the neighboring 
province of Dagestan, about the same time explosions of apartment buildings in 
three Russian cities famously took the lives of roughly 300 people. 

When Vladimir Putin became president in 2000, his solution was a new war. With 
it came more atrocities, deeper brutalization and, in Russia at large, growing 
xenophobia against "those from the Caucasus." This time federal forces defeated 
the Chechen fighters, but terrorist attacks continued through 2004. The most 
horrific of these was the seizure of Beslan school where more than 330 
hostages, over half of them children, were killed that September. 

By the mid-2000s, secession was no longer the issue in Chechnya, but a new 
problem was building: Militant Islam was on the rise all over the North 
Caucasus. In the early '90s Islam had still been weak in this traditionally 
Muslim territory; adults had secular Soviet educations, and the attraction of 
Russian culture was still strong. But the new generation growing up in the 
Chechnya devastated by the Russian army, and in neighboring provinces such as 
Dagestan and Ingushetia, were increasingly influenced by Islamic culture and 
Islam, not infrequently its radical strains. Clandestine extremist groups 
called for jihad across the territory of Russia. Training centers for suicide 
bombers reportedly operate in the North Caucasus. 

The Kremlin shifted tactics a few years ago, installing pro-Moscow leaders in 
these Muslim provinces and reducing the federal government's mission to 
allocating funds and occasional anti-terrorist operations. It turned a blind 
eye to subversive attacks, explosions, and assassinations of area police and 
local administrators, which have become routine in Ingushetia and Dagestan. The 
central government also ignored the brutal practices local leaders used against 
Islamic radicals and other criminal or extremist groups. As long as violence 
was contained within the North Caucasus, the thinking went, the bulk of Russia 
remained relatively safe. But last week's attacks underscore just how flawed 
and shortsighted this policy is. 

Today, the rise of radical Islam in the North Caucasus is inevitable, 
especially with such forces active in many parts of the world. Russia's only 
strategic option is a long-term and multi-pronged government commitment to the 
problem. It is critical that the Russian government and the nation treat the 
people of the North Caucasus as their fellow countrymen -- no easy task given 
that today they are seen as a suspect culture or simply unwanted intruders. 
Other urgent needs are to improve security in Russia at large as well as to 
increase the efficiency of anti-terrorism practices. But these missions will be 
next to impossible in a country where the violent behavior of police officers 
makes them a threat to the people, rather than a force from which citizens can 
draw protection. 

Strains of official rhetoric echo the language of 1999: After the infamous 
blasts of Moscow apartment buildings, Putin pledged to wipe out terrorists in 
outhouses. Now he vows "to drag them out of the sewer and into broad daylight." 
But large-scale use of force is not an option. As happened in the '90s, it is 
bound to start another vicious circle of punitive measures and extremists' 
efforts to exact revenge. 

Reasonable calls have also been heard. President Dmitry Medvedev spoke last 
week about the need to create in the North Caucasus "the right kind of modern 
environment for education, for doing business, for overcoming cronyism . . . 
and, of course, for confronting corruption." But corruption plagues more than 
the North Caucasus; it's the texture of the Russian system of governance, which 
is built on political monopoly and unaccountability. Unless Russia makes 
systemic reforms, good intentions will not translate into stronger policies. 

Masha Lipman, editor of the Carnegie Moscow Center's Pro et Contra journal, 
writes a monthly column for The Post.

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