-Caveat Lector-

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Doesn't Fit

sent by Peter Bell

[Apparently, the Chechens have oil reserves - not
mentioned in this
piece.  Tends to explain why necons would like to see
Chechnya Free at
Last.-PB]

The Guardian - September 8, 2004
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1299318,00.html

The Chechens' American friends

The Washington neocons' commitment to the war on
terror evaporates in
Chechnya, whose cause they have made their own

by John Laughland

An enormous head of steam has built up behind the view
that President
Putin is somehow the main culprit in the grisly events
in North
Ossetia.
Soundbites and headlines such as "Grief turns to
anger", "Harsh words
for
government", and "Criticism mounting against Putin"
have abounded,
while
TV and radio correspondents in Beslan have been
pressed on air to say
that
the people there blame Moscow as much as the
terrorists. There have
been
numerous editorials encouraging us to understand - to
quote the Sunday
Times - the "underlying causes" of Chechen terrorism
(usually Russian
authoritarianism), while the widespread use of the
word "rebels" to
describe people who shoot children shows a surprising
indulgence in the
face of extreme brutality.

On closer inspection, it turns out that this so-called
"mounting
criticism" is in fact being driven by a specific group
in the Russian
political spectrum - and by its American supporters.
The leading
Russian
critics of Putin's handling of the Beslan crisis are
the pro-US
politicians Boris Nemtsov and Vladimir Ryzhkov - men
associated with
the
extreme neoliberal market reforms which so devastated
the Russian
economy
under the west's beloved Boris Yeltsin - and the
Carnegie Endowment's
Moscow Centre. Funded by its New York head office,
this influential
thinktank - which operates in tandem with the
military-political Rand
Corporation, for instance in producing policy papers
on Russia's role
in
helping the US restructure the "Greater Middle East" -
has been quoted
repeatedly in recent days blaming Putin for the
Chechen atrocities. The
centre has also been assiduous over recent months in
arguing against
Moscow's claims that there is a link between the
Chechens and al-Qaida.

These people peddle essentially the same line as that
expressed by
Chechen
leaders themselves, such as Ahmed Zakaev, the London
exile who wrote in
these pages yesterday. Other prominent figures who use
the Chechen
rebellion as a stick with which to beat Putin include
Boris Berezovsky,
the Russian oligarch who, like Zakaev, was granted
political asylum in
this country, although the Russian authorities want
him on numerous
charges. Moscow has often accused Berezovsky of
funding Chechen rebels
in
the past.

By the same token, the BBC and other media sources are
putting it about
that Russian TV played down the Beslan crisis, while
only western
channels
reported live, the implication being that Putin's
Russia remains a
highly
controlled police state. But this view of the Russian
media is
precisely
the opposite of the impression I gained while watching
both CNN and
Russian TV over the past week: the Russian channels
had far better
information and images from Beslan than their western
competitors. This
harshness towards Putin is perhaps explained by the
fact that, in the
US,
the leading group which pleads the Chechen cause is
the American
Committee
for Peace in Chechnya (ACPC). The list of the
self-styled
"distinguished
Americans" who are its members is a rollcall of the
most prominent
neoconservatives who so enthusastically support the
"war on terror".

They include Richard Perle, the notorious Pentagon
adviser; Elliott
Abrams
of Iran-Contra fame; Kenneth Adelman, the former US
ambassador to the
UN
who egged on the invasion of Iraq by predicting it
would be "a
cakewalk";
Midge Decter, biographer of Donald Rumsfeld and a
director of the
rightwing Heritage Foundation; Frank Gaffney of the
militarist Centre
for
Security Policy; Bruce Jackson, former US military
intelligence officer
and one-time vice-president of Lockheed Martin, now
president of the US
Committee on Nato; Michael Ledeen of the American
Enterprise Institute,
a
former admirer of Italian fascism and now a leading
proponent of regime
change in Iran; and R James Woolsey, the former CIA
director who is one
of
the leading cheerleaders behind George Bush's plans to
re-model the
Muslim
world along pro-US lines.

The ACPC heavily promotes the idea that the Chechen
rebellion shows the
undemocratic nature of Putin's Russia, and cultivates
support for the
Chechen cause by emphasising the seriousness of human
rights violations
in
the tiny Caucasian republic. It compares the Chechen
crisis to those
other
fashionable "Muslim" causes, Bosnia and Kosovo -
implying that only
international intervention in the Caucasus can
stabilise the situation
there. In August, the ACPC welcomed the award of
political asylum in
the
US, and a US-government funded grant, to Ilyas
Akhmadov, foreign
minister
in the opposition Chechen government, and a man Moscow
describes as a
terrorist. Coming from both political parties, the
ACPC members
represent
the backbone of the US foreign policy establishment,
and their views
are
indeed those of the US administration.

Although the White House issued a condemnation of the
Beslan
hostage-takers, its official view remains that the
Chechen conflict
must
be solved politically. According to ACPC member
Charles Fairbanks of
Johns
Hopkins University, US pressure will now increase on
Moscow to achieve
a
political, rather than military, solution - in other
words to negotiate
with terrorists, a policy the US resolutely rejects
elsewhere.

Allegations are even being made in Russia that the
west itself is
somehow
behind the Chechen rebellion, and that the purpose of
such support is
to
weaken Russia, and to drive her out of the Caucasus.
The fact that the
Chechens are believed to use as a base the Pankisi
gorge in
neighbouring
Georgia - a country which aspires to join Nato, has an
extremely
pro-American government, and where the US already has
a significant
military presence - only encourages such speculation.
Putin himself
even
seemed to lend credence to the idea in his interview
with foreign
journalists on Monday.

Proof of any such western involvement would be
difficult to obtain, but
is
it any wonder Russians are asking themselves such
questions when the
same
people in Washington who demand the deployment of
overwhelming military
force against the US's so-called terrorist enemies
also insist that
Russia
capitulate to hers?

[John Laughland is a trustee of the British Helsinki
Human Rights
Group]

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