Hi Melvin. Couple of comments.

>
> 2. You are not a Stalinist, have never claimed or
> implied such and the
> anti-Stalin propaganda directed against you is
> designed to dissuade people from
> reading the excellent material and sources of
> information you provide.

I am not a fan of Stalin, but what I find annoying is
the faity-tale version of history some people have
concocted for themselves. It goes like this: The
heroic Bolsheviks came to power and everybody in
Russia shouted "hurray!" The Soviet Union was all set
to become a second Garden of Eden under the leadership
of the wise and benevolent Trotsky, who of course
everybody loved, but then evil Stalin appeared and
corrupted everything single-handedly and of course
everybody in the Soviet Union hated him. It's a
cartoon version of history.

>
> 5. The series and pieces on "where are they at" or
> the big wigs that came to
> top through various schemes of stealing money . . .
> and those who did not
> steal but were smart in a new political climate, was
> excellent. Although, being
> smart basically meant stealing the money.

Yes that was Mark Ames at his best. I'm attacking a
very good piece he wrote a couplr fo years ago on
Western media coverage of Chechen terrorism.


> And there any Casino's in Moscow?

Moscow is the fourth-largest city in the world in
terms of population, and is riding an economic boom
that is now in its fifth year. Moscow has everything.

 I am a communist
> and "unreconstructed
> Stalinist" - who many people in the former Soviet
> Union worship as a God, but
> Stalin never wrote

Well they worshipped him as a God back in the 30s and
40s. Today, in the VTsIOM opinoon polls, about 20% of
respondents say Stalin was completely good for the
country, 30% say he was good on the whole, 20% say he
was bad on the whole, 10% say he was completely bad,
and the rest are "I don't know" or "I don't care."
(These are better scores than what Lenin gets, by the
way.) In the Brezhnev era most people viewed Stalin as
a bloody dictator. Today, though, his posthumous
popularity rating is probably at its highest since the
Secret Speech, despite 50 years of state anti-Stalin
propaganda. Kagarlitsky had a good article on this a
couple of years ago.

Of course he was popular. He had complete control of
the media and a carefully built up cult of
personality.

Here's the Ames piece:

You Say "Terrorist", Washington says "Shuttup"
By Mark Ames ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] )

Last December, an incredible piece of evidence emerged
in the indictment of accused 9-11 terrorist Zacarias
Moussaoui.

While most of the media and Capitol Hill were focused
on the CIA and FBI's failure to "connect the dots," a
crucial clue has still been left unexplored: the Al
Qaeda-Chechnya connection. If the US Government had
been willing to explore the Chechen Connection, it
could have prevented the terror attacks on September
11th.

Buried in the middle of the June 6th Washington Post
article "Hill Probers Upgrade Evidence Gathered From
Moussaoui" was proof that the failure to uncover the
terrorist plot was not just a matter of poor
coordination, but rather a direct result of deliberate
U.S. foreign policy.

I'm going to quote a large chunk of the article here
because it is so stunning, and because it has hitherto
been so grossly overlooked.

A bit of background: on August 16th, 2001, Moussaoui
was arrested in Minneapolis on immigration charges
after an official at the Pan Am International flight
school told the FBI he feared Moussaoui was planning a
hijacking. Over the next few weeks, Minneapolis FBI
agents tried to convince Washington to give them a
warrant to search Moussaoui. Washington refused. The
local agents' frustration reached such a pitch that
they even went to CIA for help, for which they were
upbraided by Washington.

Here is why they couldn't get the warrant:

"The main point of the dispute [between the
Minneapolis FBI branch and Washington] was the value
of information gathered about Moussaoui, a French
national who had entered the United States in early
2001, and whether there was enough evidence to secure
a warrant to search his belongings.

"The FBI received information from French
intelligence, for example, including interviews with a
family that blamed Moussaoui for inciting their son to
fight and die with Muslim rebels in Chechnya, sources
said.

"In her letter to Mueller, Rowley wrote that the
French reports 'confirmed his affiliations with
radical fundamentalist Islamic groups and activities
connected to Osama bin Laden.' She argued that agents
had enough evidence in hand 'within days' of
Moussaoui's arrest to provide probable cause for a
warrant.

"Headquarters officials, however, insist that the
French information detailed no direct ties between
Moussaoui and any designated terrorist group, a
requirement for obtaining a FISA [Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act] warrant. The Chechen rebels, while
believed to have links with bin Laden, were not
considered a terrorist group by the State Department.

"'The angle we consistently had with the French was
the Chechnya angle,' one U.S. official said. 'There
were no specifics about affiliations with al Qaeda, no
reports of being in the [al Qaeda] camps in
Afghanistan - nothing.'

"In the end, lawyers at FBI headquarters declined to
approve the Minneapolis request for such a warrant. It
wasn't until Sept. 11, hours after the suicide
attacks, that the FBI sought and obtained a search
warrant, although it came from a criminal court rather
than the intelligence panel.

"The evidence they allegedly found included a computer
disk containing information related to crop-dusting;
the phone numbers in Germany of Ramzi Binalshibh, an
al Qaeda fugitive who allegedly helped finance the
plot; and flight deck videos from an Ohio store where
two of the hijackers, Mohammed Atta and Nawaf Alhazmi,
had purchased the same equipment.

"...One of the most tantalizing pieces of information
was correspondence identifying Moussaoui as a
'marketing consultant' for a Malaysian computer
technology firm, Infocus Tech. The letters were signed
by 'Yazid Sufaat, Managing Director,' and stipulated
that Moussaoui was to receive a $2,500-per-month
allowance.

"That connection, it now appears, could have proved
critical. Sufaat, a Malaysian microbiologist, provided
his Kuala Lumpur condominium for a 'terrorism summit'
attended by Alhazmi and another Sept. 11 hijacker,
Khalid Almihdhar, in January 2000, according to CIA
and FBI officials [who monitored the summit]. The
gathering was also attended by a man later identified
as one of the leading suspects in the October 2000
bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen.

"...Knowledge of Sufaat's letter to Moussaoui would
have disclosed a possible al Qaeda connection, but it
remained unexamined while the Minneapolis agents tried
and failed to obtain a search warrant."

In other words, had America agreed to list the Chechen
separatists as "terrorists," as the Russians have been
urging them to do since 1999, the warrant would have
been immediately obtained and evidence of the plot
possibly uncovered. This was America's best chance of
foiling the September 11th attacks. However, official
U.S. policy has refused to recognize the Chechen
separatists as terrorists linked to Al Qaeda - despite
the incredible wealth of evidence proving the
connection. The Moussaoui evidence shows that
America's policy of refusing to view the Chechen
separatists as "terrorists" was directly responsible
for the failure to pursue Moussaoui. This was not mere
human error or bureaucratic inefficiency. It was the
result of a carefully-designed policy worked out by
the Bush Administration.

Bush's core foreign policy team - National Security
Advisor Condoleeza Rice, Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz -
started boasting months before they took office about
how tough on Russia they planned to get. And "tough on
Russia" meant "soft on Chechnya" - after all, if the
Chechens hated the Russians, they couldn't be all bad.

One of the Bush administration's first foreign-policy
moves was deciding to meet representatives of the
Chechen separatists at the highest level ever. In
February of 2001, a ranking State Department official,
John Beyrle, met with Ilyas Akhmadov, the foreign
minister of the separatist Chechen leadership. (By
comparison, the Clinton Administration had only
allowed a Russian desk officer to meet with Akhmadov.)

The Russians were furious. Sergei Markov, one of the
Kremlin's leading talking tools, published an article,
"Russia Can See Beyond Bush's Cold-War Logic" on the
Kremlin's web site, strana.ru, in which he demanded
that any US official who met with the Chechen rebels
should be deemed persona non grata in Russia. Reading
Markov's article now, it's clear the Russians were
trying to make sense of this unprovoked humiliation:

"The team of Cold-War veterans and inexperienced
diplomats who shape the diplomacy of the new U.S.
administration is pushing Russia toward actions in
keeping with Cold-War logic. But Russia cannot benefit
from such logic: Russia seeks not confrontation, but
integration with the West. Therefore, Russia should
not accept Cold-War logic."

It is a strange reversal of roles: America as the
erratic belligerent, Russia as the sober negotiator,
trying to calm the madman down.

The Chechen connection to International Islamic
militants is nothing new. Chechens were one of the
most visible ethnic groups among the foreign fighters
in Afghanistan. Yet while Al Qaeda, the Taliban,
Uighur separatists, the IMU and other groups fighting
alongside Al Qaeda were labeled terrorists by the
State Department and media, the Chechens were spared,
simply because the Bush administration had a soft spot
for any group which was anti-Russian.

Early this year, with the Bush Administration so drunk
on its Afghan victory that it was ready to scrap the
ABM treaty, expand NATO and establish bases in the
Caucuses and Central Asia, America essentially pulled
down its pants in front of Russia and yelled, "Eat
Me!" For the first time in history, Radio Liberty
began broadcasting in the Chechen language. The move
was considered such a slap in the face that even
Grigory Yavlinsky, one of the few liberal politicians
with the courage to oppose the second Chechen war from
the outset, said that Radio Liberty's decision showed
"the tactlessness that is typical of American
politicians."

Desperate Muslim separatist groups in any other
country turn to extremism and terrorism, and they get
labeled Al Qaeda-linked international terrorists.
Chechens do the same only on a larger scale, and they
get... a Radio Liberty broadcast and a good feting.

Why?

It's not as if the Chechen-Al Qaeda link is a great
secret.

The phrase "thousands of Chechen fighters" was
repeated nearly every day in the Western press to
describe the Al Qaeda fighters battling the Coalition
troops.

Videotapes of Chechens cutting the throats of Russian
hostages have been one of the top hits of the
terrorist underworld.

Moussaoui was known to have got his start as a
recruiter for Chechen war jihadists in France and
elsewhere.

And last week Mounir Motassadeq, who is on trial in
Hamburg accused of being part of Mohammed Atta's cell,
testified that Atta and his comrades had wanted to
fight in Chechnya but were told by Al Qaeda that they
weren't needed there.

According to an October 23rd Washington Post article,
"Hijackers Had Hoped To Fight In Chechnya, Court
Told":

"In the opening day of his trial in a Hamburg state
court, Motassadeq testified that he knew of Atta's
ambition to fight in Chechnya and that the two men
spoke together after Atta returned from Afghanistan in
February 2000.

"'Atta said to me, "I was in Afghanistan and the
people said to us that the Chechens do not need
[fighters] anymore,"' Motassadeq testified."

How much more obvious could the Chechnya connection
be? Muhammed Atta only brought down the World Trade
Center because he was turned away from his first
dream: fighting in Chechnya.

In the past few months, at least 15 Al Qaeda members,
two of whom were considered to be high ranking, were
reported captured in the Pankisi Gorge, a
northern-Georgia region that borders Chechnya and has
been controlled by Chechen separatists until now.
Indeed, the alleged presence of the Al Qaeda
terrorists gave the U.S. a pretext for introducing
Green Berets into Georgia, a move which the Russians
saw as a shocking betrayal of the post-9/11 alliance.

Yet Western news reports over the past week covering
the hostage crisis were contemptuous of President
Putin's claim that the terror attack on Moscow was
tied to international terrorism. Even after the
terrorists themselves announced their affiliation with
Islamic extremism as loudly and clearly as possible by
releasing a video of themselves on Al Jazeera - the
venue of choice for international terrorists
everywhere - Washington refuses to recognize the
obvious.

Typical is this aside, from a Reuters hostage-crisis
article:

"Russia has drawn attention to Arab fighters in
Chechnya and accuses the rebels of links to radical
Islamist groups like the Afghan Taliban and al Qaeda,
whom Washington blames for the September 11 attacks.
But privately, Western diplomats play down any Chechen
involvement by al Qaeda."

Rival AP took the same line the next day:

"In televised remarks, Putin described the
hostage-taking as one of the largest terror attacks in
history and claimed it had been planned 'in one of the
foreign terrorist centers' that 'made a plan and found
the perpetrators.' He didn't provide evidence that the
raid was organized abroad."

Can you imagine a single AP, Reuters or any American
article questioning the Bush Administration's
"evidence" of Osama bin Laden's guilt in the 9/11
attacks? Particularly in the middle of the terror?

It's been a year now since the World Trade Towers
fell, and I haven't seen or read any hard evidence
directly implicating bin Laden. I'm not saying he's
not guilty, but if we're going to be fair about this,
we'd have to ask what right America had to kill
thousands of Afghan civilians in order to drive out Al
Qaeda when so little evidence has been presented - and
why the threshold for what constitutes "evidence" is
so impossibly high in Russia's case, where the Chechen
rebels have all but screamed into the world's face:
"We're linked to international terrorists! We're
linked to international terrorists!"

And why wouldn't they be? The Chechens need all the
help they can get. America allied with Stalin against
Hitler - why wouldn't Chechen separatists ally
themselves with Al Qaeda, Wahabbites and whoever else
would give them C-4, sat phones and phony passports?
As besieged Muslims, they make an obvious object of
sympathy for radical Muslims around the world who feed
on grievances, particularly those with fond memories
of the Afghanistan jihad that eventually drove the
Soviets out (and Saudi oilogarchs looking to expand
their influence).

Among those who fought the Soviets alongside Osama bin
Laden in Afghanistan was Khattab, the slain Chechen
rebel leader. It's absurd to imagine that these men
wouldn't help each other in their respective jihads.

But the US refused to see a connection--until it
needed the Russians' help. The U.S. ambassador to
Russia, Alexander Vershbow, said shortly after
September 11, "We have long recognized that Osama bin
Laden and other international networks have been
fueling the flames in Chechnya, including the
involvement of foreign commanders like Khattab."

Unfortunately, that view of the Chechen separatists
never became official policy. Most unfortunately for
the victims of 9/11 that is.

The question then isn't whether or not the Chechens
are part of what is called "international terrorism."
They are. The question is rather why the West, and the
U.S. in particular, makes such an exception for the
Chechen cause. It's nauseating to read how hard the
right-wing American heart bleeds for Chechens, because
the fact is American conservatives have never given a
flying fuck about anyone who can't golf.

Bush after all is Ariel Sharon's biggest supporter in
the whole wide world, calling him a "man of peace," a
description that must have made even Sharon wince.

The Palestinians aren't the only oppressed Muslims
whom the Bush Administration could give an official
"your oppression doesn't exist" shit about. The U.S.
hasn't made a cause over the plight of Turkey's Kurds
(80,000 dead in 15 years), the Philippines' Muslims
(120,000 dead in 24 years), China's Uighurs, the
Fergana Valley separatists in Central Asia (our new
Caspian oil region friends), or any other of our
friends' Muslim separatist minorities - not to mention
the hundreds of millions of Arabs who live under
despotic regimes propped up by the U.S.

The Bush Administration said from the start that they
were reorienting their foreign policy away from
Clinton's policy of promoting human rights and
democracy - which they found childish and
"unrealistic" - towards a policy promoting "American
interests," which presumably means U.S. oil and
military interests. It's all in the great Republican
tradition of the coalition of Twerps and Frat Boys:
the Twerps love the sound of their leaders talking
"realism" and the Frat Boys love their oil tankers.

Thus today, Chinese Uighur separatists, the IMU (an Al
Qaeda-linked separatist group in the Fergana Valley),
Philippine Muslim separatists Abu Sayyef and the
Kurdish PKK are all on the State Department's
terrorist list.

Not the Chechens. Not even after last week.

It's not because Chechens are soft, cuddly people.
During the period of Chechen independence from
1996-1999, the Chechens kidnapped up to 3,500
Russians, introduced radical Sharia law and invaded
Dagestan. If you believe Putin, Chechen terrorists
also were responsible for the 1999 Moscow apartment
bombings that killed over 300. They have committed
numerous terrorist acts - from last week's attack on
the Nord-Ost musical to airliner, ferry and hotel
hijackings, bombings, assassinations. Each is a
terrorist act by any "official" definition. Yet
somehow the Chechens have been able to avoid being
labeled "terrorists." They're just legitimate
separatists who happen to have elements who engage in
terrorist acts, right?

(Remember, this isn't a flaky semantic dispute or a
Russophile/Russophobe debate: the use of the term is
vital because it is the difference between whether or
not a group gets its bank accounts frozen, its members
harassed and hunted, and law enforcement officials
access to FISA warrants on-demand.)

This bizarre double-standard holds true in the media
as well. I tracked the evolution of the words used to
describe the Chechen terrorists in the American press
during the opening hours of the Moscow siege last
Wednesday night. It was amazing: every possible
description was found to avoid using the word
terrorist, as if the Western reporters had a thesaurus
with specific instructions: "Don't use the word
'terrorist'!"

In the early hours of the hostage crisis, Reuters
called the Chechens an "armed gang," while AP and CNN
called them "Gunmen." The BBC called the Chechens
"armed attackers." Like bank robbers or Crips. This in
spite of the fact that in the same article, they
described how the "gunmen" were Chechens ready for
suicide and that they would blow all 800 hostages up
if Russia didn't end its war in Chechnya.

When it was clear that "armed gang" and "gunmen" had
specific political demands, Reuters, early Thursday
morning Moscow time, changed its term describing the
Chechens: "About 40 Chechen guerrillas armed with guns
and grenades held hundreds of Moscow theater-goers
hostage on Wednesday night, threatening to blow up the
building if police tried to storm it."

Not to be outdone, AP found a similar yet equally
value-friendly term to define the Chechens: "About 50
armed Chechen rebels seized a crowded Moscow theater
Wednesday night, firing their weapons and taking
hundreds in the audience hostage."

They went from an "armed gang" and "gunmen" to
"guerrillas" and "rebels." It's actually an
improvement value-wise. Which would you rather be
known as if you were taking over a theater of 800
innocents and trying to gain sympathy for your cause:
a "terrorist" [worst], a "gunman" [bad, but better] or
a "rebel"? Here's a hint: The Boston Tea Party and the
Lexington Minutemen were "rebels." Al Qaeda and Abu
Sayyef are "terrorists."

Which makes me wonder: why aren't Al Qaeda known as
guerrillas or rebels? Their political demands are
clear: stop supporting Israel and corrupt Arab
regimes. Why wasn't the poor sap who farted his way
out to the USS Cole on a rubber dinghy packed with C-4
a "rebel" or a "guerrilla"?

I've searched Yahoo for the past few weeks to see why
some groups are called "terrorist" while others are
"rebels." Here is a partial list of all the terrorists
in the headlines: "Terrorists behind bomb blast at
southern Afghanistan school, education officials say"
[Oct 20]; "Court orders retrial of convicted
Jordanian-American terrorist" [Oct 16]; "Woman jailed
as terrorist suspect linked to Briton's murder" [Oct
15]; "New Zealand increases pressure on Indonesia to
hunt down terrorists" [Oct 15]; "Yemen Blast Likely a
Terrorist Act" [Oct 11]; "Terrorist Kin to Head
Venezuela Post" [Oct 11]; "Kyrgyzstan and China begin
joint anti-terrorist exercises" [Oct 10]; "Philippine
mission to urge EU to declare local communist rebel
group a foreign terrorist organization" [Oct 10 - and
by the way, the EU listened to the Philippines];
"Marine Killed in Terrorist Attack in Kuwait" [Oct 9];

It's pretty easy to find the pattern: If you are a
stateless guerrilla group and you attack America or
America's sphere of influence, you are a terrorist. In
an October 12th AP article "A List of Terrorist
Attacks" catalogues the year's terror highlights,
including bombs in the Philippines, Bali, Pakistan and
Tunisia...yet no mention of the bomb in Kaspysk, which
killed 42 Russian marching band members! Amazingly,
even an attack on inorganic matter - a French oil
tanker - gets terrorist billing over Chechen
"rebel/guerrilla" attacks on 800 innocent middle-class
Muscovites.

You've got to wonder: Do Russians count as people to
the West?

Russia's problem, first and foremost, is that it
dared, under Putin, to assert itself. That was
unforgivable, and allowed the American Right to revert
back to the only role it has felt comfortable in for
the last 50 years: Russia-bashing.

Western journalists have had a somewhat more confused
relationship with the Chechen resistance. At first, in
1994, it seemed like the Next Big Bosnia: evil
Orthodox Slavic oppressors versus oppressed Muslim
minority underdogs. Many a cub reporter's career was
made in Chechnya... that is, until the Chechens got
their independence and started lopping off everyone's
heads, including Westerners'.

When the second Chechen War started, Western reporters
were less inclined to see the Chechens as good-hearted
minority underdogs. They were scared of the Chechens.
And after the debacle in Kosovo, where another
oppressed Muslim minority turned savage oppressor once
given power, most Western journalists were a little
less inclined to hyper-romanticize the Chechens.

However, the brutal behavior of the Russian occupying
troops, as well as Putin's refusal to toe Bush's line
on the war in Iraq, has brought out the latent
Russophobe in many a powerful journalist.

Nowhere is this Russophobia more evident than in the
Washington Post's Fred Hiatt.

Hiatt's Russophobia comes from a sense of having been
personally betrayed by the Russian financial collapse
in August, 1998. Up till then, Hiatt was one of the
most shameless and shameful cheerleaders of Yeltsin's
kleptocracy.

In one of his most infamous articles in March, 1998,
Hiatt wrote an unabashed blowjob on oligarch Vladimir
Potanin, lovingly labeling him a "baby billionaire."
He called shock therapy "necessary" and "right" and
its architect, Yegor Gaidar, Russia's "most admirable
reformer."

Then it happened: the 1998 crash and incontrovertible
proof that the Hiatts - that is, the entire Western
press corps and think tank division - was wrong.
Hiatt's answer?

Rallying from post-crash crash humiliation, Hiatt went
on the offensive in his "Who Lost Russia?" article in
which he wrote that the failure in Russia was "not the
failure of the U.S., but a Russian failure," and that
the question of Who Lost Russia was not appropriate
because "Russia was never ours to lose." Russia had
outed Hiatt, shown everyone that he'd lived a lie for
nearly a decade, as shill for a gang of thieves.
Hiatt, and all the other chirpy neo-liberal
missionaries, have never forgiven Russia for revealing
them as the third-rate suckups they are.

Hiatt and his fellow neo-liberal boosters made Russia
into their own pro bono patient. But when the patient
didn't respond to the medicine they were force-feeding
it, they blamed the patient - indeed, hated the
patient - and haven't forgiven him since.

In 1999, Hiatt moved to Washington to take over the
Post's opinion page, perhaps the single most
influential newsprint job in the world, which he has
turned into a grotesquely anti-Russian forum. a
platform for Hiatt's spurned-love type hatred of
Russia.

But I never thought that even Hiatt could write what
he did in last Friday's Post. On that Friday, two days
into the hostage siege, Hiatt published what must
surely be the most inhuman, offensive Washington Post
editorial of his career, "Chechnya in Moscow." It must
be quoted at length because paraphrase would be taken
for wild exaggeration. And remember again, this was
published in the middle of the hostage crisis:

"Even if they prove to be real, the hostage-takers'
supposed links to other fanatical groups - and the
Russian media's insistence already that 'this is our
Sept. 11' - should not be allowed to obscure the
differences between America's war on terrorism and
Russia's war against Chechnya. It is important to draw
distinctions between Mr. Maskhadov, the mainstream
Chechen commanders and the Chechen civilian
population, on the one hand, and the Muslim militants,
on the other. The latter have played only a peripheral
role in the conflict, while the former are fighting a
legitimate war against an outside invader."

This is a lie and Hiatt knows it. The top two warlords
during the bulk of the conflict have been Shamil
Basayev and Khattab, both radical Muslims. But more
than that, notice the derision he casts not just on
the idea that the "hostage takers' have links to other
fanatical groups" - and even more offensively, Hiatt,
hiding behind the anonymous weight of the Washington
Post editorial page, is genuinely outraged that the
Russians could possibly claim to have a tragedy like
America's when he includes "the Russian media's
insistence that 'this is our Sept. 11'" clause as part
of that which doesn't really matter, "even if it
proves to be real." Who are the Russians to compare
their pain to ours? They're nobodies, that's who!

Incredibly enough, with 800 innocent civilians lives
on the line, Hiatt's first instinct is to say, "Your
tragedy's not as big as my tragedy!" That, folks, is
the level of compassion and sophistication at which
America's most influential opinion-maker operates.

It isn't that Hiatt is anti-war. God no, the man loves
it! He was oddly forgiving of Russia's military
conduct during the first Chechen war, when his young
reformer friends were in power in Moscow. He was
aggressively in favor of bombing Serbia in 1999, even
going so far as to blame the deaths caused by America
on Milosevic, and encouraging NATO to bomb "Mr.
Milosevic" [as if only he, and not 10 million Serbs,
were being targeted] "no matter how long it takes."

Today, Hiatt is considered one of the country's
leading editorial hawks on Iraq, for which he was
singled out by The Nation as perhaps the single most
influential propagandist for the upcoming war. He is
anything but squeamish as a rule.

But he sure as hell cares about Chechens! Or rather,
he sure as hell can't seem to forgive the Russians.
The above-mentioned editorial ends with an
over-the-top swipe at Russia during what was truly one
of its darkest moments in modern history. In it, he
blames the Moscow hostage crisis and looming death of
800 Russians squarely on Russia itself, much as he
blamed Russia for its own economic collapse four years
earlier, the last time Russia had suffered such a
serious shock:

"Russia's war in Chechnya is also different because -
unlike America's war on terrorism - it has a clear
political solution. The Russian president, Vladimir
Putin, could begin negotiating with Mr. Maskhadov
tomorrow and could end the war just as easily, if he
could muster the political willpower. Paradoxically,
ending the war would also make the fight against al
Qaeda's terrorist network in Chechnya far easier. In
the end, it is the Russian government's invasion -
with its systematic bombardment of civilians, its
human rights violations and its mass executions - that
has created anarchy in Chechnya, so conducive to al
Qaeda and its ilk. While the United States must
support Mr. Putin during this frightening new crisis,
the Bush administration must also do everything it can
to persuade the Russians, finally, to confront its
true cause."

Hiatt's outburst was so shocking that the Russian
ambassador, Yuri Ushakov, wrote a letter to the Post,
published the next day:

"Imagine that on the morning of Sept. 12, 2001, an
influential Russian newspaper used the previous day's
terrorist attacks on New York and the Pentagon as an
opportunity to lecture the U.S. government on its
conduct. I suspect that most Americans would have
found this patronizing advice to be deeply offensive,
and yet this is precisely what The Post has done in
its Oct. 25 editorial "Chechnya in Moscow." Moreover,
The Post took this position while hundreds of innocent
civilians - including women, children and, yes,
Americans - continued to be held hostage and
threatened with mass murder at the hands of their
Chechen captors.

"The Post claims that Russia's war in Chechnya is
different from the American war on terrorism because
it could be ended "easily" if President Vladimir Putin
had sufficient "political willpower." But the United
States could also bring an end to the war on
terrorism, for example, by abandoning Israel, closing
its bases in the region and withdrawing its troops.
Successive U.S. administrations have maintained these
policies because they have seen them as important or
even vital to U.S. national interests. My country's
territorial integrity is no less important to its
government and citizens.

"Aslan Maskhadov's policies during 1996-99 - when he
was Chechen leader and the Russian military was
practically absent from Chechnya - speak for
themselves. During this period Chechnya, which enjoyed
de facto independence, adopted Islamic sharia courts,
developed an alliance with the Taliban, offered
hospitality to al Qaeda representatives and became the
scene of widespread kidnapping and murder, including
of Western aid workers. Russia's reintroduction of its
military forces in 1999 came after attacks by Chechen
forces in the adjacent region of Dagestan. It also
followed terrorist bombings, linked to Chechen groups,
of three apartment buildings; hundreds of innocent
people were killed. The outrageous mass hostage-taking
still underway should demonstrate to any unbiased
observer that the Chechen militants are perfectly
capable of such acts.

"Muscovites and other Russians closely followed the
acts of the Washington sniper in recent weeks,
identified with the fear and insecurity of area
residents, and have been happy to see the apparent
capture of those responsible. As Moscow's crisis
unfolded, President Bush was among the first foreign
leaders to call President Putin to extend his sympathy
and help; he offered not only political but also
practical support in resolving the hostage situation.
But no less important to the Russian people is the
simple demonstration of Americans' broader sympathy
during this moment of great trial.

"As a Russian - as a human being - I am sorry that The
Post cannot offer even that much.

YURI USHAKOV
Ambassador
Embassy of the Russian Federation Washington"

With Russophobes like Hiatt egging on the rightwingers
in Bush's administration, the US imposed an utterly
ruinous policy of flirtatious accommodation with the
Chechen separatists. Ruinous because this policy was
one of the key reasons why the 9/11 plot was not
uncovered, and ruinous because of future unforeseen
consequences not just in terms of our relations with
Russia, but because, like it or not, the Chechens
really are linked to international Islamic terrorism.

In other words: if anything clearly wasn't in
America's interests, it's America's coy and cynical
game vis-�-vis the Chechen separatists.

This isn't easy to print publicly, even though I know
several Western correspondents who, at the beginning
of the second Chechen war, said much worse things
off-the-record about the Chechens and what they
deserved.

But the war is still going on three years later. It is
savage and brutal, it no longer feels like revenge or
giving the Chechens what they deserve for having
fucked up their years of independence so badly. It's a
slow, dull genocide. Like so many other genocides we
ignore. It seems to have such a clear solution to
civilized Westerners: Putin should simply negotiate
peace with Maskhadov, shake hands, and be done with
it. Yet when America bombed Serbia, the Hiatts and
McFauls didn't patronizingly demand that Clinton
negotiate a settlement with Milosevic; rather, Hiatt
demanded that NATO keeping bombing "no matter how long
it takes." Nor has he called for a political solution
with Iraq. America refused to negotiate with Milosevic
unless he met all their demands unconditionally;
today, America refuses to negotiate with Saddam
Hussein or Osama bin Laden at all, ever. Why would
negotiation be "different" and clearly logical in
Chechnya, which already has a record of a massively
failed negotiated settlement, and whose dispute
(are/aren't a part of Russia) is absolute and thus
beyond compromise?

It would be equally absurd to pretend that the
Chechens aren't hooked deeply into Islamic extremism.
The Chechens separatists aren't cute, harmless rebels.
They don't aspire to be; they are great fighters and
proud of it. And, like it or not, a lot of them are
world-class kidnappers, killers, and extortionists.

No Westerner will dare say this. The Hiatts of America
and the West don't want to see it. They are as blind
and simplistic in their jeering at Russia today as
they were in cheering the reformers before the
financial crisis.

This administration is supposed to be "realistic"
about "America's interests."

So what is America's interest in fetishizing the
Chechen cause while befriending just about every other
minority-oppressing tyrant on the globe?

If you want "realism," here are some grim realities
behind America's bizarre coyness toward the Chechens.
First: Wahhabism, a Saudi export, is the preferred
version of Islamic extremism among Chechen fighters.
Turkey has been often fingered as another supporter of
Chechen separatism, and it's no coincidence that the
only Chechen terrorist operations outside Russia have
taken place in Turkey. During last week's hostage
crisis, the FSB traced the terrorists' consultation
calls to Saudi Arabia and Turkey and their embassies
in Moscow.

Saudi Arabia and Turkey are two very close allies of
America. Saudi Arabia is the number one oil producer;
Russia is number two and threatening to break into the
US market and disrupt OPEC. Turkey is the destination
point for the Caspian Sea oil, the third largest
reserves in the world. Its Ceyhan outlet will compete
against Russian ports. Four of the five Central Asian
republics speak a Turkic language, something Turkey
has consistently tried to exploit, fomenting
pan-Turkic sentiment throughout the 'Stans.

There is no doubt that Saudi Arabia and Turkey have a
hand in the Chechen war. The question is to what
degree America's policy towards the Chechen
separatists is influenced by its allies' support of
the Chechens--and whether or not the Bush
administration is serving its own people's interests
as well as it's serving its oil allies'. But this
isn't the first time this question has been raised.

America's greatest fear now is that Al Qaeda will set
off a nuclear or dirty nuke in a major city. Russia is
a poor, corrupt, badly governed nation awash in
nuclear, chemical and biological weaponry. During the
first Chechen war, the Chechen rebel leader Shamil
Basayev left a small container of highly radioactive
material in Moscow's Sokolniki park to let the
authorities know what he had at his disposal and how
far he'd be willing to go.

Recent reports suggest that Al Qaeda is recruiting
non-Arab-looking operatives to carry out operations in
the West and America. Chechens, particularly the more
Slavic-looking ones, were cited as ideal recruits.

Considering the power and strength of the Chechen
mafia and its access to any corner of Russia, the
brutality and bravery of Chechnya's fighters, their
religious fanaticism and links to Islamic extremism,
is it really a good idea to let mindless Cold War
Russophobia keep the Chechen separatists off the US
State Department's international terrorist list?

In the past two days, White House officials have been
using the word "terrorists" to describe last week's
attack. However, with an emotionally unstable
Russophobic media goon like Fred Hiatt controlling the
nation's most influential Op-Ed pages, and thousands
more Hiatts in alliance with the Cold War
Waffentwerpen who dominate Bush's foreign policy team,
it's hard to believe that the administration will make
any move that it perceives as benefiting Russia--even
if that means shooting America in the nuts.





=====
Nu, zayats, pogodi!



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