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PAS : KE ARAH PEMERINTAHAN ISLAM YANG ADIL
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"Osman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
salam,
teori yg lebih dahsyat dari itu yg membabitkan syaikh tareqat sufi pun kita
dengar, tapi apa gunannya, cuma teori dan khabar yg belum tentu.
tapi yg dah jelas berlaku depan mata ialah org sufi berperang bersama kapir
rusia dlm membunuh org islam di dagestan dan chechnya.
wslm
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mateen Siddiqui [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Sat, 29 Jan 2000 12:04:22 -0500
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Fw: Terror bombing known 4 months before
>
>
> MSA-EC - http://sunnah.org
>
>
> > The Independent (UK)
> > 29 January 2000
> >
> > Russia 'planned Chechen war before bombings'
> >
> > Former Prime Minister reveals invasion of republic was prepared months
> > in advance of terrorist attacks
> >
> > By Patrick Cockburn in Moscow
> >
> > A senior Russian leader says that Russia made its plans to invade
> > Chechnya
> > six months before the bombing of civilian targets in Russia and the
> > Chechen
> > attack on Dagestan which were the official pretext for launching the
> > war.
> >
> > His account wholly contradicts the official Russian version of the start
> > of
> > the war, which claims that it was only as a result of "terrorist"
> > attacks
> > last August and September that Russia invaded Chechnya. Sergei
> > Stepashin,
> > Russian Interior and Prime Minister for most of last year, said the plan
> > to
> > send the Russian army into Chechnya "had been worked out in March". He
> > says
> > he played a central role in organising the military build up before the
> > invasion, which "had to happen even if there were no explosions in
> > Moscow".
> >
> > Mr Stepashin, in recent interviews with the daily Nezavissimaya Gazeta
> > and
> > Interfax agency, says that as early as last March Russia intended to
> > invade
> > Chechnya as far as the Terek river north of Grozny, the Chechen capital,
> > in
> > August or September. In fact the Russian army crossed into Chechnya on 1
> > October.
> >
> > Mr Stepashin, Interior Minister up to May and then Prime Minister until
> > August, was at the centre of Russian decision-making in both jobs. He
> > says
> > the inner cabinet held a closed meeting with army and security chiefs in
> > March to discuss the operation against Chechnya.
> >
> > The revelation by Mr Stepashin, that Russia planned to go to war long
> > before
> > it has previously admitted, lends support to allegations in the Russian
> > press
> > that the invasion of Dagestan in August and the bombings in September
> > were
> > arranged by Moscow to justify its invasion of Chechnya.
> >
> > Boris Kagarlitsky, a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences Institute
> > of
> > Comparative Politics, writing in the weekly Novaya Gazeta, says that the
> > bombings in Moscow and elsewhere were arranged by the GRU (the Russian
> > military intelligence service). He says they used members of a group
> > controlled by Shirvani Basayev, brother of the Chechen warlord Shamil
> > Basayev, to plant the bombs. These killed 300 people in Buikask, Moscow
> > and
> > Volgodonsk in September.
> >
> > Mr Kagarlitsky, who, from internal evidence in the article, is drawing
> > on a
> > source with close knowledge of the GRU, says that invasion of Dagestan
> > by
> > Shamil Basayev himself in August was pre-arranged with a senior Kremlin
> > leader at a meeting in France in July.
> >
> > He says that the motive for launching war was the need for the political
> > leadership in the Kremlin to control the succession to President Boris
> > Yeltsin. By last summer Mr Yeltsin, a year from his retirement as
> > president,
> > was deeply unpopular. His family and associates feared for their freedom
> > and
> > their fortunes if a president hostile to their interests was elected
> > this
> > June.
> >
> > In an unnoticed reference in Svenska Dagbladet, the Swedish daily, on 6
> > June
> > last year, the paper's Moscow correspondent Jan Blomgren wrote that one
> > option being considered by the Kremlin and its associates was "terror
> > bombings in Moscow which could be blamed on the Chechens". This was four
> > months before the first bomb. Mr Blomgren told the Independent that his
> > sources, whom he cannot name, were familiar with discussions within the
> > political elite.
> >
> > A month later, writes Mr Kagarlitsky, a meeting took place in the south
> > of
> > France attended by Alexander Voloshin, head of the presidential
> > administration, Shamil Basayev, the Chechen warlord, and Anton Surikov,
> > a
> > former official belonging to the army special services.
> >
> > Both sides had interests in common. Mr Basayev's political fortunes had
> > ebbed
> > in Chechnya and might be restored by a small war. The Kremlin was also
> > in
> > need of an outside enemy. According to Mr Kagarlitsky they agreed that
> > Mr
> > Basayev would launch a military foray into Dagestan and that Russia
> > would
> > respond by invading northern Chechnya up to the Terek river.
> > Participants in
> > the meeting have all denied it took place.
> >
> > Events now moved quickly. On 8 August Mr Basayev's forces invaded
> > Dagestan to
> > the east of Chechnya. On 9 August Vladimir Putin replaced Mr Stepashin
> > as
> > prime minister. In Dagestan the invasion did not go as planned. Mr
> > Basayev's
> > forces were beaten off but, according to the Russian magazine Profile,
> > were
> > virtually escorted back to the Chechen border by two Russian
> > helicopters.
> >
> > Cooperation between Mr Basayev and the Russian army is not so surprising
> > as
> > it sounds. In 1992-93 he is widely believed to have received assistance
> > from
> > the GRU when he and his brother Shirvani fought in Abkhazia, a breakaway
> > part
> > of Georgia. Russia did not want to act overtly against Georgia but
> > covertly
> > supported a battalion of volunteers led by Mr Basayev.
> >
> > It is now alleged that the cooperation between the GRU and Shirvani
> > Basayev
> > went further. The invasion of Dagestan might be resented in Russia, but
> > it
> > was insufficient to mobilise Russian public opinion. This only occurred
> > when
> > four massive bombs exploded in Russia in September. The first, at a
> > military
> > housing complex at Buinaksk in Dagestan, blew up on 4 September killing
> > 83
> > people. The next two were targeted at ordinary Russian civilians. On 8
> > and 13
> > September explosives demolished two working-class apartment blocks in
> > south
> > Moscow leaving 228 men, women and children dead. Three days later a
> > truck
> > exploded in Volgodonsk.
> >
> > It was the wave of anger and hatred among Russians against Chechens,
> > universally blamed for the attacks, that gave Mr Putin the backing he
> > needed
> > to invade Chechnya. An unknown figure when appointed, with just 2 per
> > cent
> > support in the polls, he was soon the leading candidate to win the
> > presidency. In December Mr Yeltsin was able to retire more gracefully
> > than
> > seemed possible six months before and Mr Putin became acting president.
> >
> > Mr Kagarlitsky now alleges that the GRU itself was behind the bombing.
> > He
> > says it used Shirvani Basayev to carry it out "because he was more
> > easily
> > managed" than his brother. It also appears that he himself and his men
> > did
> > not know exactly why they had been recruited by the GRU for a special
> > mission.
> >
>
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