Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 11 – Sergey
Chenchik, the MVD chief in the North Caucasus Federal District, says that since
the beginning of 2003, Russian forces have killed “more than 3500” members of
illegal band formations and detained “about 8000” others, statistics that
underline just how serious conflicts across that region continue to be.
When you hear such figures from
Russian officials, Timur Izmailov, an independent analyst in the region says,
you are forced to reflect upon what is “really” taking place in the North
Caucasus regardless of whether you have full confidence in these numbers or
others that have been offered (wordyou.ru/v-rossii/ston-kavkaza.html).
To put these numbers into some kind
of perspective, Izmailov says, one needs to remember that Maskhadov’s Chechen
army never numbered much more than 4,000 but that the new MVD figures are about
the entire North Caucasus and not just Chechnya. As such, he says, they seem “plausible.”
But the question arises, he
suggests, as to whether all of those killed or captured are “real participants
of the Islamic armed underground in the North Caucasus.” Islamist sites routinely publish the names
and even pictures of those Russian forces have killed because those behind
these sites believe those who have died in the fighting are heroes.
That creates a problem,
however. The Islamist sites have an
interest, Izmailov says, in exaggerating their numbers and their losses and
frequently enlist to their cause “posthumously” people who while alive were not
distinguished by particular commitment to Islam and may not even have known
“the direction in which Mecca is located.”
And that parallels what the MVD
does: describing those it has killed or captured as Islamist militants or
terrorists even if those involved were neither but instead residents of the
region who had the misfortune to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.
Indeed, to defend its own actions, the MVD has no other choice.
Izmailov thus implies but doesn’t
say that both the MVD and the Islamist sites are each caught between two
opposing pressures. On the one hand, the
MVD looks good if it reports high casualty figures, and the Islamists do if
they do so and thus imply that the level of combat remains very high.
But on the other hand, if the MVD
continues to report high casualty figures, that calls into question Moscow’s
claims of progress, and if the Islamists do, they may face problems with
recruitment of new fighters, although that does not yet seem to a be a problem
for them anywhere in the region.
What is clear if one goes beyond these
statistics, Izmailov says, is that the Russian special services are “carrying
out a real and uncompromising war with a real terrorist underground” and that
the militants are continuing their fight, recruiting new people to replace any
of the losses they are suffering.
In reporting his ministry’s
statistics, which one may or may not accept, Izmailov says, Chenchik pointed to
two other problems that Moscow thinks it now faces. First, he said, there is
almost no ideological work being directed at the children of militants, a serious
shortcoming given that many of these young people are now studying in
medrassahs.
And second, despite the Islamist
slogans of the militants, few of them know much about Islam. “The percent [of militants] with Islamic
educations is extremely low,” Chenchik says, a pattern that makes the appearance
of anyone with such training a victory that the militants view as important “as
if they had received a truckload of Stinger missiles.”
In summarizing Chenchik’s remarks,
Izmailov suggests that Russian officials should be less concerned about
statistics than about what stands behind them because many in the North
Caucasus and beyond know that the Russian siloviki have killed many innocent
people and then called them militants or terrorists.
Changing that attitude is, the
analyst says, absolutely “necessary not only for the children [of militants and
Islamists] but for all of us. Otherwise, the war in the Caucasus will never
end,” however many of those fighting the Russian government and its
representatives there claim to have killed.
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