Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 9 – Most observers
have argued that over the last dozen years, religious-based terrorism has
displaced ethnic or nationalist violence, but now, according to a specialist on
the Caucasus, Islamist terrorism there is being overshadowed by a new form, one
he calls “social terrorism” which seeks to destroy the institutions of the state
as such.
This is an extremely worrisome
trend, Artur Atayev, a researcher at the Russian Institute for Strategic
Studies (RISI), because unlike nationalist terrorism which has separatist goals
and religious terrorism which seeks the victory of one religion over another,
social terrorism has as its goal the destruction of the state as such” (regnum.ru/news/polit/1702295.html).
According
to Atayev, “the activity of the Narodnya Volya movement in 19th
century [Russia] is a clear example of social terrorism.” The goals of such groups
today or “more precisely the goals of their sponsors and ideologues who work
outside the borders of the country” is to promote “social terrorism.”
Radical
Islamists alone cannot achieve that because they are limited by their own
doctrines to Muslims, the researcher continues.
“For carrying out this project, they are trying to involve
representatives of other religions and are involved in proselytism” among
ethnic Russians whom they are trying to recruit to their ranks.
This
trend is still relatively small, Atayev says, but it is already noteworthy in
Stavropol kray. He does not add, but it almost
certainly is the case that recent Russian police raids on the National
Organization of [Ethnic] Russian Muslims (NORM) in St. Petersburg reflect
growing concern among Russian officials about this phenomenon.
In
speaking of the evolution of terrorism in Russia since 1991, Atayev says that today
“there is no nationalist terrorism on the territory of Russia, but there is
religious terrorism” in the north Caucasus republics of Daghestan, Ingushetia,
Kabardino-Balkaria, and Karachayevo-Cherkesia. And it is spreading north to
Stavropol, the Middle Volga and Russian cities.
Atayev says that Russia is currently
“one of the most successful states” as far as the struggle against terrorism is
concerned, having decimated the large groups of the 1990s and gradually mopping
up the smaller ones. But the new social terrorism presents a new set of
challenges, and Moscow is going to have to redouble its efforts in response.
That is because this new form is not
limited to one ethnic group or religion but has the potential to involve people
of different nationalities or religious affiliations on the basis of their
hatred of the state, thus forming groups that are inevitably far more difficult
to identify and thus far harder to suppress.
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